Joey Dunlop to be honoured in Ballymoney event
"It's been 25 years, it's still not easy. It's still not easy living with the name, I can assure you, but time is a little bit of a healer," he said.
"But the longer it goes on you come to realise how unique everything is and how special it is to a lot of the fans and at the end of the day, that's why we are happy to see it."
Pacemaker
Liam Beckett, Dunlop's former mechanic and a close friend of the family, said he would never forget the day of the crash.
"Young Richard, Joey's youngest lad, was staying in my house that weekend. He would have been my son William's biggest friend and they still are to this day," he told BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme.
"It was Donna who arrived at our house that morning in tears, Joey's daughter, to break the news to us.
"To be honest with you, it's a shock I don't think I'll get over 'til the day I go but, it's great to see so many people rallying around to mark the 25th anniversary of his passing."
He described Dunlop as "a quiet humble man who did his talking on the track", adding: "It's great to see that Joey's memory lives on."
Brian Reid
Brian Reid is a former double Formula Two world champion who raced against Dunlop and became his friend.
"He was a great ambassador for our sport and proved it worldwide," he told BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme.
"I watched him before I started racing and I watching him coming towards the top but would never have dreamt that one day, I would be racing alongside him and, eventually, the odd time, beating him."
Reid said the anniversary event proved that "the popularity of Joey and the racing world is still there".
"It's great to see that everybody is getting involved in this wonderful event and to see all these bikes and getting a chance to ride one of them is going to be a great honour," he said.
The free public event will begin at 14:00 BST and finish at 22:00 and will show off Dunlop's original bikes as well as autograph signings and entertainment.
The parade of bikes will take place from 18:00 to 20:00, along North Road, High Street, Main Street, Seymour Street, Station and return via Townhead Street.
The roads will close to vehicles from 17:00 to 21:00.
Car and bike parking is available at various sites in Ballymoney town centre.
A park and ride will operate from the Joey Dunlop Leisure Centre from 14:00 and the last return journey will be at 22:30.
The event will be live streamed via Greenlight Television's King of the Roads platform with the broadcast scheduled to begin at 18:00.
The Joey 25 Exhibition at Ballymoney Museum will also be open on Saturday from 09:00.
It hosts a collection of artefacts and memorabilia such as Dunlop's restored and original motorcycles, rare photographs, racing leathers, trophies and personal items that mark Joey's remarkable career.
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William Joseph Dunlop was born near Ballymoney on 25 February 1952 and died at the age of 48 on 2 July 2000 in Tallinn, Estonia.
Respected as the "King of the Roads", the sportsman achieved 26 Isle of Man TT wins, five Formula One World Championships, 13 North West 200 (NW200) victories and 24 Ulster Grand Prix triumphs.
He was honoured with an MBE in 1986 and an OBE in 1996 for his humanitarian work with children in Eastern Europe.
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BBC Sport NI presenter Stephen Watson said Saturday was an "incredibly special event to celebrate the achievements of Joey Dunlop, one of Northern Ireland's greatest ever sporting ambassadors".
Speaking to BBC Radio Ulster's Good Morning Ulster programme, he added : "I don't think you'll ever see a collection of motorcycle riders together in the one place at the same time ever again because they're coming from all different disciplines of the sport and all different eras.
"And every single rider who is coming on Saturday will be riding one of Joey Dunlop's original machines.
"They are expecting literally thousands of people to descend on Ballymoney this weekend to pay homage to their hero, even though it's 25 years on, the interest in this event has been truly remarkable from all over the world," Mr Watson said.
The big names at the event include: World Superbike champions Carl Fogarty and Jonathan Rea; Grand Prix stars Ron Haslam, Jeremy McWilliams and Eugene Laverty; British champions Leon Haslam and Adrian Coates; World record holder Ryan Farquhar.
Double World Formula 2 Champion Brian Reid will also join Alan Irwin, Trevor Steele, Con Law, Raymond McCullough and Leslie McMaster