2014 Speedway European Championship

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2014 Speedway European Championship
Season details
Dates6 July – 19 September
Events4
Cities4
Countries4
Riders15 permanents
1 wild card(s)
2 track reserves
Heats(in 4 events)
Winners
Champion RUS Emil Sayfutdinov
Runner-up DEN Peter Kildemand
3rd place DEN Nicki Pedersen

The 2014 Speedway European Championship season was the second season of the Speedway European Championship (SEC) era, and decided the 14th UEM Individual Speedway European Championship. It was the second series under the promotion of One Sport Lts. of Poland.

The championship was won by Russia's Emil Sayfutdinov, six points ahead of Danish rider Peter Kildemand. Third place went to another Danish rider, Nicki Pedersen, who was another four points behind Kildemand. Pedersen had won the opening two races of the season, before Sayfutdinov moved ahead in the standings after a win at Holsted in Denmark. A fourth-place finish in Częstochowa – an event won by Russian Grigory Laguta – was enough to give Sayfutdinov the title.

Qualification[]

For the 2014 season, 15 permanent riders were joined at each SEC Final by one wild card and two track reserves.

Defending champion, Martin Vaculík from Slovakia was automatically invited to participate in all final events. Nicki Pedersen and Grigorij Laguta secured their participation in all final events thanks to being in the top 3 of the general classification in the 2013 season.

Emil Sayfutdinov, Andreas Jonsson and Tomasz Gollob received and accepted a wild card to compete in the 2014 Speedway European Championships.[1][2]

Qualified riders[]

# Riders 2013 place SEC Ch place Appearance Previous appearances in series
1 Slovakia Martin Vaculík 1 2nd 2013
5 Denmark Nicki Pedersen 2 2nd 2013
111 Russia Grigorij Laguta 3 2nd 2013
20 Poland Tomasz Gollob 7 2nd 2013
89 Russia Emil Sayfutdinov 9 2nd 2013
100 Sweden Andreas Jonsson 1st
33 Poland Adrian Miedziński 1 1st
27 Poland Janusz Kolodziej 2 1st
25 Denmark Peter Kildemand 3 1st
313 Denmark Kenni Larsen 4 1st
13 Sweden Jonas Davidsson 5 1st
19 Croatia Jurica Pavlic 12 6 2nd 2013
69 Poland Patryk Dudek 7 1st
169 Latvia Andrzejs Lebedevs (wildcard) 8 1st
84 Germany Martin Smolinski (wildcard) 1st

Controversy[]

The European Union Motorcycle (FIM-Europe) introduced a formal ban that prevented riders in the Speedway Grand Prix taking part in the Speedway European Championship. The decision had been rumoured for weeks before being officially confirmed on 3 November 2013. That meant that all riders taking part in the World Championship could not be regular participants of the SEC. Amongst the riders who received permanent wild cards from the SEC were Emil Sayfutdinov, Andreas Jonsson and Tomasz Gollob.[3]

Shortly after this, riders started to show the support to the SEC and their displeasure about the situation. As a result of this, already invited rider Tomasz Gollob, Andreas Jonsson, Nicki Pedersen and Emil Sayfutdinov sent an open letter to the FIM-Europe requesting the solution of the situation.[4]

A statement from series organisers One Sport Lts. on 17 November 2013 pointed out that the ban was inconsistent with European law and announced an intention to take required legal action. They used the European Union Microsoft competition case as an example.[5]

On 29 November, Emil Sayfutdinov announced that he was prepared to drop out of the 2014 SGP series in order to ride in the Speedway European Championship. As a reason, he explained that his Russian sponsors insisted their logos were seen in their country and SEC tournaments were transmitted by a Eurosport channel available in Russia, whereas Grand Prix competitions were not shown by any TV channel in Russia. Moreover, one of SEC tournaments was due to be held in Russia in 2014.[6] On the same day, Tomasz Gollob also announced that he would participate in the Speedway European Championship.

On 6 December, , a representative for One Sport Lts., tweeted that "It seems that there will be no ban for SGP riders in SEC 2014. Another strong signal, that we have won – but still nothing official".[7] On 20 December, he also tweeted another message: "OFFICIAL: One Sport received an official letter from FIM-Europe with information that they advised FIM to not ban any riders from SEC", which basically ended the story.[8]

On 7 February 2014, the FIM board of directors officially took the decision to ban World Championship participants from participating in any kind of European Championships tournament. One Sport LLC declared their disapproval with the FIM's decision.[9][10] Shortly after, Tomasz Gollob announced that he would refuse his wild card invitation for the SGP Bydgoszcz tournament, whereas Andreas Jonsson decided to refuse his SEC invitation in favour of participating in SGP.[11] Emil Sayfutdinov asked to drop his application for SGP.[12]

On 28 February 2014, the FIM board of directions officially announced that the previous ban for SGP riders to participate in SEC was delayed until 1 January 2015.[13]

Changes[]

In the 2014 season, the participating riders had the possibility to choose the number which would be on their race jacket. In the past, the riders in all tournaments had an obligatory number which was given to them by the organizers. During the first tournament, the defending champion wore a yellow race jacket and for all following tournaments, the current general classification leader wore the jacket.[14]

Calendar[]

Qualification[]

The calendar for qualification consisted of 3 Semifinal events and one event.[15] At the end of March, the first semifinal round was moved from the Ukraine to Latvia.

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
Semifinal 1 17 May Latvia Daugavpils, Latvia

Spīdveja centrs (Length: 373m)

Denmark Michael J. Jensen Latvia Andrzej Lebiediew Poland Patryk Dudek Poland Maciej Janowski results
Semifinal 2 17 May Slovenia Krsko, Slovenia

Matija Gubec Stadium (Length: 387m)

Latvia Maksim Bogdanow Poland Przemyslaw Pawlicki Ukraine Croatia Jurica Pavlic results
Semifinal 3 25 May Slovakia Žarnovica, Slovakia

Speedwaystadium (Length: 400 m)

Poland Janusz Kolodziej Denmark Peter Kildemand Sweden Jonas Davidsson Poland Adrian Miedzinski results
SEC Challenge 8 June Hungary Debrecen, Hungary

Speedway Stadium (Length: 398 m)

Poland Adrian Miedzinski Poland Janusz Kolodziej Denmark Peter Kildemand Denmark Kenni Larsen results

Championship Series[]

A four-event calendar was scheduled for the final series,[16][17] with events in Germany, Russia, Denmark and Poland.

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
1 6 July Germany Güstrow, Germany

Speedway Stadion Güstrow (Length: 298m)

Denmark Nicki Pedersen Denmark Peter Kildemand Poland Janusz Kołodziej Poland Tomasz Gollob results
2 20 July Russia Tolyatti, Russia

Mega-Lada Stadium (Length: 353m)

Denmark Nicki Pedersen Russia Emil Sayfutdinov Poland Patryk Dudek Slovakia Martin Vaculík results
3 9 August Denmark Holsted, Denmark

Moldow Arena (Length: 300m)

Russia Emil Sayfutdinov Denmark Peter Kildemand Slovakia Martin Vaculík Latvia Maksims Bogdanovs results
4 19 September Poland Częstochowa, Poland

Częstochowa Arena (Length: 368m)

Russia Grigory Laguta Denmark Nicki Pedersen Denmark Peter Kildemand Russia Emil Sayfutdinov results

Classification[]

Pos. Rider Points Germany Russia Denmark Poland
1 Russia (89) Emil Sayfutdinov 54 11 15 13 15
2 Denmark (25) Peter Kildemand 48 11 12 13 12
3 Denmark (5) Nicki Pedersen 44 14 13 6 11
4 Slovakia (1) Martin Vaculík 41 7 14 12 8
5 Poland (27) Janusz Kołodziej 38 14 6 8 10
6 Latvia (21) Maksims Bogdanovs 34 8 8 11 7
7 Croatia (19) Jurica Pavlic 31 3 9 11 8
8 Sweden (100) Andreas Jonsson 31 9 5 9 8
9 Poland (20) Tomasz Gollob 27 9 4 5 9
10 Latvia (169) Andžejs Ļebedevs 22 7 8 4 3
11 Poland (33) Adrian Miedziński 21 9 5 4 3
12 Russia (111) Grigory Laguta 17 17
13 Poland (69) Patryk Dudek 16 4 12
14 Denmark (313) Kenni Larsen 14 6 3 3 2
15 Sweden (13) Jonas Davidsson 14 5 5 3 1
16 Germany (84) Martin Smolinski 13 5 3 5
17 Denmark (16) Niels-Kristian Iversen 10 10
18 Denmark (15) Michael Jepsen Jensen 9 9
19 Poland (16) Rune Holta 7 7
20 Germany (16) Christian Hefenbrock 4 4
- Russia (16) 4 4
22 Denmark (16) Rasmus Jensen 2 2
23 Latvia (18) Ķasts Puodžuks 1 1
- Denmark (17) Patrick Hougaard 1 1
25 Germany (17) Kai Huckenbeck 0 0
- Poland (17) 0 0
Germany (18) Tobias Busch ns
Russia (17) ns
Russia (18) ns
Poland (18) Borys Miturski ns
2014 Speedway European Champion
Russia
Emil Sayfutdinov
First title

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Gollob will start in SEC 2014!". speedwayeuro.com. 29 November 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  2. ^ "Emil Sajfutdinow znalazł sponsorów na Grand Prix! Jest jednak jeden warunek" (in Polish). sportowefakty.pl. 29 November 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  3. ^ "Grand Prix riders banned from SEC!". speedwayeuro.com. 4 November 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  4. ^ "GP Stars Frustrated By European Ban!". speedway365.com. 7 November 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  5. ^ "Emil Sajfutdinow chce unieważnienia Entry Form!". sportowefakty.pl. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  6. ^ "Emil Commits To European Championship!". speedway365.com. 29 November 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  7. ^ "It seems that there will be no ban for SGP riders in SEC 2014". twitter.com. 6 December 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  8. ^ "OFFICIAL: One Sport received an official letter from FIM-Europe". twitter.com. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  9. ^ "Statement of One Sport LLC according to FIM decisions". sportowefakty.pl. 16 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  10. ^ "Znamy treść pisma FIM kierowanego do One Sport!". sportowefakty.pl. 13 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  11. ^ "Jonsson zrezygnował z SEC! "Andreas chce być mistrzem świata"". sportowefakty.pl. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  12. ^ "Emil Sajfutdinow chce unieważnienia Entry Form!". sportowefakty.pl. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  13. ^ "Oficjalnie: FIM zawiesza zakaz łączenia startów w SGP i SEC!". sportowefakty.pl. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  14. ^ "Riders themselves will choose the starting numbers". speedwayeuro.com. 8 January 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  15. ^ "SEC semi-finals, May 2014: Rivne, Krsko and Zarnovica. SEC Challenge, 08 June 2014: Debrecen" (in Polish). sportowefakty.pl. 7 December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  16. ^ "EM-deltävling till Skandinavien" (in Swedish). speedwaynyheter.se. 22 November 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2013.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ "SEC semi-finals, May 2014: Rivne, Krsko and Zarnovica. SEC Challenge, 08 June 2014: Debrecen" (in Polish). sportowefakty.pl. 7 December 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.

External links[]

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