2014 Speedway Grand Prix
Season details
DatesApril 5 — October 11
Events12
Riders15 permanents
1 wild card(s)
2 track reserves
Heats276 (in 12 events)
Winners
Champion USA Greg Hancock
Runner-up POL Krzysztof Kasprzak
3rd place DEN Nicki Pedersen

The 2014 Speedway Grand Prix season was the 69th edition of the official World Championship[1][2] and the 20th season of the Speedway Grand Prix era, deciding the FIM Speedway World Championship. It was the fourteenth series under the promotion of Benfield Sports International, an IMG company. Tai Woffinden was the defending champion from 2013.

1997 and 2011 world champion Greg Hancock won a third world title, after taking top-five placings in all but one race he contested, including a victory at the British round, in Cardiff. Hancock won the title by eight points ahead of Krzysztof Kasprzak, who was the season's most frequent winner, with three victories. Third place in the championship was decided in a run-off at the final round of the season at Torún in Poland. Three-time world champion Nicki Pedersen and defending champion Woffinden – a winner in back-to-back events in Prague and Målilla, Sweden – finished tied on points, but Pedersen clinched the position after beating Woffinden in the run-off.

Aside from Hancock, Kasprzak and Woffinden, six other riders won rounds during the season. Martin Smolinski was the winner of the opening race in Auckland, New Zealand; it was his first victory in the series. Like Smolinski, Slovenia's Matej Žagar was a first-time winner in the Finnish round at Tampere, en route to a fifth-place finish in the championship. Niels Kristian Iversen and Jarosław Hampel, who finished third and second behind Woffinden in 2013, each won races; Iversen won in Copenhagen while Hampel triumphed at Stockholm. Other winners were Andreas Jonsson in Vojens, Denmark and Bartosz Zmarzlik, who won on a wildcard appearance, on home soil, at Gorzów Wielkopolski.

Qualification

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

The top eight riders from the 2013 championship qualified automatically. In March 2014, before the start of the season, Emil Sayfutdinov – who finished sixth in 2013 – elected not to compete in 2014 series, because he has failed to recover from serious injuries sustained the previous season. He was replaced by second substitute Troy Batchelor.[3] Those riders were joined by three riders who qualified via the Grand Prix Challenge. Since the winner of the Grand Prix Challenge, Niels Kristian Iversen, had already qualified following his third position in the 2013 championship, fourth-placed Martin Smolinski qualified.

The final four riders were nominated by series promoters, Benfield Sports International, following the completion of the 2013 season.[4] Early in October 2013, former world champion Tomasz Gollob accepted a nomination for the series, but later withdrew from the competition due to unforeseen developments in his sponsorship program. He was replaced by first substitute Chris Harris.[5]

Qualified riders

#Riders2013 placeGP Ch placeAppearancePrevious appearances in series
1United Kingdom Tai Woffinden13rd2010, 2011, 2013
33Poland Jarosław Hampel29th2000–2002, 2004–2007, 2008–2009, 2010–2013
88Denmark Niels Kristian Iversen314th2004–2005, 2006, 2008, 2009–2010, 2013
45United States Greg Hancock420th1995–2013
5Denmark Nicki Pedersen514th2000, 2001–2013
55Slovenia Matej Žagar74th2003–2005, 2006–2007, 2008–2009, 2011, 2013
43Australia Darcy Ward82nd2011, 2013
507Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak1023rd2004–2007, 2008, 2012, 2013
66Sweden Fredrik Lindgren117th2004, 2006–2007, 2008–2013
23Australia Chris Holder125th2010–2013
100Sweden Andreas Jonsson1313th2001, 2002–2013
91Denmark Kenneth Bjerre35th2004–2008, 2009–2012
84Germany Martin Smolinski41st2008
37United Kingdom Chris Harris2057th2003, 2007–2012, 2013
75Australia Troy Batchelor61st2013

Qualified substitute

The following rider qualified as a substitute due to their result in the Grand Prix Challenge.[4]

#Riders2013 placeGP Ch place
19Denmark (19) Michael Jepsen Jensen217

Calendar

The 2014 season consisted of 12 events, just like 2013.

RoundDateCity and venueWinnerRunner-up3rd placed4th placedResults
1 April 5 New Zealand Auckland , New Zealand
Western Springs Stadium
Germany Martin Smolinski Denmark Nicki Pedersen Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Sweden Fredrik Lindgren results
2 April 26 Poland Bydgoszcz, Poland
Polonia Stadium
Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Australia Darcy Ward Poland Jarosław Hampel United States Greg Hancock results
3 May 17 Finland Tampere , Finland
Tampere Stadium
Slovenia Matej Žagar United Kingdom Tai Woffinden Sweden Fredrik Lindgren United States Greg Hancock results
4 May 31 Czech Republic Prague , Czech Republic
Markéta Stadium
United Kingdom Tai Woffinden United States Greg Hancock Slovenia Matej Žagar Denmark Nicki Pedersen results
5 June 14 Sweden Målilla , Sweden
G&B Stadium
United Kingdom Tai Woffinden United States Greg Hancock Australia Chris Holder Poland Jarosław Hampel results
6 June 28 Denmark Copenhagen , Denmark
Parken Stadium
Denmark Niels Kristian Iversen Australia Troy Batchelor United States Greg Hancock Denmark Peter Kildemand results
7 July 12 United Kingdom Cardiff , Great Britain
Millennium Stadium
United States Greg Hancock United Kingdom Tai Woffinden Australia Darcy Ward Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak results
8 August 17 Latvia Daugavpils, Latvia
Latvijas Spīdveja Centrs
Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Denmark Nicki Pedersen United States Greg Hancock Denmark Kenneth Bjerre results
9 August 30 Poland Gorzów Wielkopolski , Poland
Jancarz Stadium
Poland Bartosz Zmarzlik Slovenia Matej Žagar Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen results
10 September 13 Denmark Vojens , Denmark
Speedway Center
Sweden Andreas Jonsson Denmark Peter Kildemand Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Australia Troy Batchelor results
11 September 27 Sweden Stockholm , Sweden
Friends Arena
Poland Jarosław Hampel United States Greg Hancock Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Australia Chris Holder results
12 October 11 Poland Toruń , Poland
Rose Motoarena
Poland Krzysztof Kasprzak Sweden Andreas Jonsson Poland Jarosław Hampel Denmark Nicki Pedersen results

Classification

Qualifies for next season's Grand Prix series
Full-time Grand Prix rider
Wild card, track reserve or qualified reserve
Pos. Rider Points NZL
New Zealand
EUR
Poland
FIN
Finland
CZE
Czech Republic
SWE
Sweden
DEN
Denmark
GBR
United Kingdom
LAT
Latvia
POL
Poland
NOR
Denmark
SCA
Sweden
PL2
Poland
Gold United States (45) Greg Hancock 140 61612121611141691513
Silver Poland (507) Krzysztof Kasprzak 132 1718707101716121117
Bronze Denmark (5) Nicki Pedersen 121 195101011581878614
4 United Kingdom (1) Tai Woffinden 121 751618179188779
5 Slovenia (55) Matej Žagar 114 66151610769166125
6 Sweden (100) Andreas Jonsson 103 7107746864151217
7 Australia (23) Chris Holder 100 1111108156910137
8 Poland (33) Jarosław Hampel 98 81472131054032111
9 Australia (75) Troy Batchelor 91 441035203891366
10 Sweden (66) Fredrik Lindgren 90 135128541066993
11 Denmark (88) Niels Kristian Iversen 87 61061311161276
12 Germany (84) Martin Smolinski 81 1579635865674
13 Denmark (91) Kenneth Bjerre 79 11434103411101018
14 Australia (43) Darcy Ward 75 5168166915
15 United Kingdom (37) Chris Harris 48 024653636544
16 Denmark (19) Michael Jepsen Jensen 42 891474
17 Denmark (16) Peter Kildemand 33 1518
18 Poland (16) Bartosz Zmarzlik 17 17
19 Poland (16) Adrian Miedziński 14 59
20 Latvia (17) Kjasts Puodžuks 10 10
21 Sweden (16) Thomas H. Jonasson 7 7
22 Sweden (16) Peter Ljung 7 7
23 Denmark (18) Mikkel B. Jensen 7 7
24 Poland (20) Maciej Janowski 7 7
25 Finland (16) Joonas Kylmäkorpi 5 5
26 Finland (17) Kauko Nieminen 4 4
27 Poland (17) Paweł Przedpełski 4 4
28 Latvia (16) Andžejs Ļebedevs 3 3
29 Sweden (20) Kim Nilsson 3 3
30 New Zealand (16) Jason Bunyan 2 2
31 United Kingdom (16) Craig Cook 2 2
32 Czech Republic (16) Vaclav Milik 2 2
33 Poland (17) Adrian Cyfer 2 2
34 Poland (18) Lukasz Kaczmarek 2 2
35 Denmark (18) Lasse Bjerre 1 1
Pos. Rider Points NZL
New Zealand
EUR
Poland
FIN
Finland
CZE
Czech Republic
SWE
Sweden
DEN
Denmark
GBR
United Kingdom
LAT
Latvia
POL
Poland
NOR
Denmark
SCA
Sweden
PL2
Poland

See also

References

  1. "WORLD INDIVIDUAL FINAL - RIDER INDEX". British Speedway. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  2. "Speedway riders, history and results". wwosbackup. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  3. "EMIL OUT OF SGP 2014". speedwaygp.com. 2014-03-04. Archived from the original on 2014-04-20. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
  4. 1 2 "CHAMPS HANDED SGP WILD CARDS". speedwaygp.com. 2013-10-22. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  5. "HARRIS REPLACES GOLLOB IN SGP". speedwaygp.com. 2013-12-11. Archived from the original on 2014-04-20. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
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