From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2019 Speedway European Championship
Season details
Dates13 July – 28 September
Events4
Cities4
Countries3
Riders15 permanents
1 wild card(s)
2 track reserves
Heats(in 4 events)
Winners
Champion  DEN Mikkel Michelsen
Runner-up  RUS Grigory Laguta
3rd place  DEN Leon Madsen

The 2019 Speedway European Championship season was the seventh season of the Speedway European Championship (SEC) era, and the 19th UEM Individual Speedway European Championship. It was the sixth series under the promotion of One Sport Lts. of Poland.

The championship was won by Mikkel Michelsen, [1] who beat Grigory Laguta in a run-off after both riders had finished the series tied on 45 points. Defending champion Leon Madsen, who missed one round through injury, also won a run-off with Kacper Woryna to finish third, while Bartosz Smektała completed the top five.

Qualification

For the 2019 season, 15 permanent riders were joined at each SEC Final by one wildcard and two track reserves.

Defending champion, Leon Madsen from Denmark was automatically invited to participate in all final events, while Jarosław Hampel, Robert Lambert, Antonio Lindbäck and Mikkel Michelsen secured their participation in all final events thanks to being in the top five of the general classification in the 2018 season.

Five riders qualified through the SEC Challenge, [2] while Nicki Pedersen, Anders Thomsen, Kai Huckenbeck, Paweł Przedpełski and Bartosz Smektała were named as series wildcards. [3]

Qualified riders

# Riders 2018 place SEC Ch place Appearance
Denmark Leon Madsen 1 4th
Poland Jarosław Hampel 2 2nd
United Kingdom Robert Lambert 3 2nd
Sweden Antonio Lindbäck 4 4th
Denmark Mikkel Michelsen 5 2nd
Russia Grigory Laguta 1 6th
France David Bellego 2 1st
Czech Republic Václav Milík 7 3 5th
Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen 4 3rd
Poland Kacper Woryna 5 2nd
Germany Kai Huckenbeck 9 2nd
Denmark Anders Thomsen 6 2nd
Poland Paweł Przedpełski 7 2nd
Poland Bartosz Smektała 10 1st
Denmark Nicki Pedersen 6th

Calendar

Qualification

The calendar for qualification consisted of 3 Semi-final events and one SEC Challenge event.

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
SEC Challenge 25 May Hungary Nagyhalász, Hungary

Nagyhalász Speedway Ring

Russia Grigory Laguta France David Bellego Czech Republic Václav Milík Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen results

Championship Series

A four-event calendar was scheduled for the final series, [4] with events in Germany, Poland and Denmark.

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
1 13 July Germany Güstrow, Germany

Stadion Güstrow

Russia Grigory Laguta Denmark Leon Madsen Poland Bartosz Smektała Sweden Antonio Lindbäck results
2 27 July Poland Toruń, Poland

Rose Motoarena

Denmark Leon Madsen Russia Grigory Laguta Poland Kacper Woryna Denmark Nicki Pedersen results
3 10 August Denmark Vojens, Denmark

Vojens Speedway Center

Denmark Mikkel Michelsen Poland Kacper Woryna Denmark Nicki Pedersen Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen results
4 28 September Poland Chorzów, Poland

Silesian Stadium

Denmark Mikkel Michelsen Denmark Leon Madsen Poland Paweł Przedpełski Poland Kacper Woryna results

Final Classification

[5]

Pos. Rider Points Germany Poland Denmark Poland
1 Denmark (155) Mikkel Michelsen 45 7 8 15 15
2 Russia (111) Grigory Laguta 45 15 12 7 11
3 Denmark (30) Leon Madsen 39 11 15 13
4 Poland (223) Kacper Woryna 39 8 10 11 10
5 Poland (115) Bartosz Smektała 36 12 7 10 7
6 Denmark (52) Michael Jepsen Jensen 35 10 6 11 8
7 Denmark (110) Nicki Pedersen 33 8 11 14
8 Poland (323) Paweł Przedpełski 27 3 8 2 14
9 Poland (33) Jarosław Hampel 25 7 8 4 6
10 Germany (744) Kai Huckenbeck 24 9 5 8 2
11 Sweden (85) Antonio Lindbäck 23 11 2 1 9
12 Czech Republic (225) Václav Milík 22 8 4 5 5
13 United Kingdom (505) Robert Lambert 18 4 8 6
14 France (415) David Bellego 14 8 4 2
15 Denmark (11) Anders Thomsen 14 3 3 8
16 Poland (16) Adrian Miedziński 9 9
17 Finland (98) Timo Lahti 9 9
18 Latvia (29) Andžejs Ļebedevs 8 8
19 Denmark (17) Andreas Lyager 7 7
20 Denmark (18) Frederik Jakobsen 7 7
21 Russia (191) Andrey Kudriashov 6 6
22 Poland (16) Maksym Drabik 6 6
23 Poland (17) Jakub Miśkowiak 5 5
24 Denmark (16) Peter Kildemand 3 3
25 Germany (16) Kevin Wölbert 2 2
26 Poland (18) Igor Kopeć-Sobczyński 0 0

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mikkel Michelsen new champion". SEC.
  2. ^ "SEC Challenge result". SEC.
  3. ^ "Participants announced". SEC.
  4. ^ "2019 SEC Events". SEC.
  5. ^ "2019 SEC Standings". SEC.

External links

speedwayeuro.com

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2019 Speedway European Championship
Season details
Dates13 July – 28 September
Events4
Cities4
Countries3
Riders15 permanents
1 wild card(s)
2 track reserves
Heats(in 4 events)
Winners
Champion  DEN Mikkel Michelsen
Runner-up  RUS Grigory Laguta
3rd place  DEN Leon Madsen

The 2019 Speedway European Championship season was the seventh season of the Speedway European Championship (SEC) era, and the 19th UEM Individual Speedway European Championship. It was the sixth series under the promotion of One Sport Lts. of Poland.

The championship was won by Mikkel Michelsen, [1] who beat Grigory Laguta in a run-off after both riders had finished the series tied on 45 points. Defending champion Leon Madsen, who missed one round through injury, also won a run-off with Kacper Woryna to finish third, while Bartosz Smektała completed the top five.

Qualification

For the 2019 season, 15 permanent riders were joined at each SEC Final by one wildcard and two track reserves.

Defending champion, Leon Madsen from Denmark was automatically invited to participate in all final events, while Jarosław Hampel, Robert Lambert, Antonio Lindbäck and Mikkel Michelsen secured their participation in all final events thanks to being in the top five of the general classification in the 2018 season.

Five riders qualified through the SEC Challenge, [2] while Nicki Pedersen, Anders Thomsen, Kai Huckenbeck, Paweł Przedpełski and Bartosz Smektała were named as series wildcards. [3]

Qualified riders

# Riders 2018 place SEC Ch place Appearance
Denmark Leon Madsen 1 4th
Poland Jarosław Hampel 2 2nd
United Kingdom Robert Lambert 3 2nd
Sweden Antonio Lindbäck 4 4th
Denmark Mikkel Michelsen 5 2nd
Russia Grigory Laguta 1 6th
France David Bellego 2 1st
Czech Republic Václav Milík 7 3 5th
Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen 4 3rd
Poland Kacper Woryna 5 2nd
Germany Kai Huckenbeck 9 2nd
Denmark Anders Thomsen 6 2nd
Poland Paweł Przedpełski 7 2nd
Poland Bartosz Smektała 10 1st
Denmark Nicki Pedersen 6th

Calendar

Qualification

The calendar for qualification consisted of 3 Semi-final events and one SEC Challenge event.

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
SEC Challenge 25 May Hungary Nagyhalász, Hungary

Nagyhalász Speedway Ring

Russia Grigory Laguta France David Bellego Czech Republic Václav Milík Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen results

Championship Series

A four-event calendar was scheduled for the final series, [4] with events in Germany, Poland and Denmark.

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
1 13 July Germany Güstrow, Germany

Stadion Güstrow

Russia Grigory Laguta Denmark Leon Madsen Poland Bartosz Smektała Sweden Antonio Lindbäck results
2 27 July Poland Toruń, Poland

Rose Motoarena

Denmark Leon Madsen Russia Grigory Laguta Poland Kacper Woryna Denmark Nicki Pedersen results
3 10 August Denmark Vojens, Denmark

Vojens Speedway Center

Denmark Mikkel Michelsen Poland Kacper Woryna Denmark Nicki Pedersen Denmark Michael Jepsen Jensen results
4 28 September Poland Chorzów, Poland

Silesian Stadium

Denmark Mikkel Michelsen Denmark Leon Madsen Poland Paweł Przedpełski Poland Kacper Woryna results

Final Classification

[5]

Pos. Rider Points Germany Poland Denmark Poland
1 Denmark (155) Mikkel Michelsen 45 7 8 15 15
2 Russia (111) Grigory Laguta 45 15 12 7 11
3 Denmark (30) Leon Madsen 39 11 15 13
4 Poland (223) Kacper Woryna 39 8 10 11 10
5 Poland (115) Bartosz Smektała 36 12 7 10 7
6 Denmark (52) Michael Jepsen Jensen 35 10 6 11 8
7 Denmark (110) Nicki Pedersen 33 8 11 14
8 Poland (323) Paweł Przedpełski 27 3 8 2 14
9 Poland (33) Jarosław Hampel 25 7 8 4 6
10 Germany (744) Kai Huckenbeck 24 9 5 8 2
11 Sweden (85) Antonio Lindbäck 23 11 2 1 9
12 Czech Republic (225) Václav Milík 22 8 4 5 5
13 United Kingdom (505) Robert Lambert 18 4 8 6
14 France (415) David Bellego 14 8 4 2
15 Denmark (11) Anders Thomsen 14 3 3 8
16 Poland (16) Adrian Miedziński 9 9
17 Finland (98) Timo Lahti 9 9
18 Latvia (29) Andžejs Ļebedevs 8 8
19 Denmark (17) Andreas Lyager 7 7
20 Denmark (18) Frederik Jakobsen 7 7
21 Russia (191) Andrey Kudriashov 6 6
22 Poland (16) Maksym Drabik 6 6
23 Poland (17) Jakub Miśkowiak 5 5
24 Denmark (16) Peter Kildemand 3 3
25 Germany (16) Kevin Wölbert 2 2
26 Poland (18) Igor Kopeć-Sobczyński 0 0

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mikkel Michelsen new champion". SEC.
  2. ^ "SEC Challenge result". SEC.
  3. ^ "Participants announced". SEC.
  4. ^ "2019 SEC Events". SEC.
  5. ^ "2019 SEC Standings". SEC.

External links

speedwayeuro.com


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