2011 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship

2011 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship
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The 2011 Individual Speedway Under 21 World Championship will be the 2011 version of FIM Individual Under-21 World Championship season. First time new champion will be determined in four finals between 23 July and 9 October 2011.[1][2]

Contents

Qualification

In five Qualifying Round will started 80 riders and to Semi-Finals will qualify top 6 from each meetings. This 30 riders and 2 riders from Semi-Final' host federations will started in two Semi-Finals. The top 7 riders from both SF will automatically qualify for all Final meetings.

Riders

There will be fourteen permanent riders (riders placed 1st to 7th in both semi finals will automatically qualify for all Final meetings). Two Wild Card riders will be nominated to each final meeting (approval and nomination by CCP Bureau). Two Track Reserve riders will be nominated by national federation.

In case of the absence of one or more riders in the final meetings, the first available Qualified Substitute rider or riders will be elevated for that meeting, and take the place(s) of the relevant missing rider(s). The list of Qualified Substitute riders will be published by the CCP after the Semi Finals.

A starting position draw for each final meeting will be balloted by the FIM.

Permanent riders

Top 7 riders from Semi-Final One in Žarnovica, Slovakia[3]

  1. Michael Jepsen Jensen (19)
  2. Martin Vaculík (21)
  3. Dennis Andersson (20)
  4. Darcy Ward (19)
  5. Patryk Dudek (19)
  6. Bartosz Zmarzlik (16)
  7. Vadim Tarasenko (17)

Top 7 riders from Semi-Final Two in Gniezno, Poland[4]

  1. Aleksandr Loktaev (17)
  2. Przemysław Pawlicki (20)
  3. Simon Gustafsson (21)
  4. Piotr Pawlicki, Jr. (17)
  5. Maciej Janowski (20)
  6. Dino Kovačić (?)
  7. Oskar Fajfer (17)

Will card and track reserve riders

Final One in Poole, England[5]

Joshua Auty (21)
Jerran Hart (20)
Joe HainesTR → Substitute for Tarasenko (20)
Steven WorrallTR → WC for Hart (20)
Paul StarkeTR (?)
Ashley MorrisTR (17)

Final Two in Holsted, Denmark[6][7]

Joe HainesWC (20)
René BachWC (21)
Mikkel MichelsenTR (?)
Jonas B. AndersenTR (?)
Mikkel B. JensenTR → Substitute for Andersen (?)

Final Three in Pardubice, Czech Republic[8]

Mikkel B. JensenWC (?)
Václav Milík, Jr.WC (18)
Michael HádekTR (21)
Jan Holub IIITR (20)

Final Four in Gniezno, Poland[9]

Václav Milík, Jr.WC (18)
Mikkel MichelsenWC (?)
Kacper GomólskiTR (18)
Tobiasz MusielakTR (18)

WC - wild card TR - track reserves

Final Series

# Date Venue Winners Runner-up 3rd place
1 July 24 Poole Darcy Ward (14+3 pts) Maciej Janowski (14+2 pts) Dennis Andersson (14+1 pts)
2 August 28 Holsted Maciej Janowski (12 pts) Martin Vaculík (11+3 pts) Dennis Andersson (11+2 pts)
3 October 1 Pardubice Maciej Janowski (15 pts) Przemysław Pawlicki (13+3 pts) Piotr Pawlicki, Jr. (13+2 pts)
4 October 9 Gniezno Przemysław Pawlicki (15 pts) Darcy Ward (14 pts) Patryk Dudek (12 pts)

Classification

The meeting classification will be according to the points scored during the meeting (heats 1–20). The total points scored by each rider during each final meeting (heat 1–20) will be credited also as World Championship points. The FIM Speedway Under 21 World Champion will be the rider having collected most World Championship points at the end of the series. In case of a tie between one or more riders in the final overall classification, a run-off will decide the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place. For all other placings, the better-placed rider in the last final meeting will be the betterplaced rider.

Pos. Rider Points
Maciej Janowski 50 14 12 15 9
Darcy Ward 46 (+3) 14 9 9 14
Przemysław Pawlicki 46 (+2) 9 9 13 15
4 Patryk Dudek 41 9 10 10 12
5 Dennis Andersson 39 14 11 8 6
6 Michael Jepsen Jensen 37 8 9 12 8
7 Martin Vaculík 35 8 11 9 7
8 Bartosz Zmarzlik 27 3 10 5 9
9 Piotr Pawlicki, Jr. 25 12 ns 13 ns
10 Aleksandr Loktaev 22 0 8 8 6
11 Simon Gustafsson 18 2 8 3 5
12 Oskar Fajfer 17 3 6 5 3
13 Mikkel Michelsen 11 4 7
14 Mikkel B. Jensen 11 3 4 4
15 Kacper Gomólski 10 10
16 Joe Haines 10 8 2
17 Vadim Tarasenko 8 4 1 3
18 Dino Kovačić 8 6 1 1
19 Václav Milík, Jr. 5 4 1
20 Steven Worrall 4 4
21 Paul Starke 3 3
22 René Bach 2 2
23 Jerran Hart 2 2
24 Tobiasz Musielak 0 0
25 Ashley Morris 0 0
Michael Hádek ns
Jan Holub III ns

See also

References

  1. ^ "Prowizoryczny kalendarz FIM na 2011 rok" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 2010-03-04. http://www.sportowefakty.pl/zuzel/2010/03/04/prowizoryczny-kalendarz-fim-na-2011-rok/. Retrieved 2010-08-29. 
  2. ^ "Zakutalizowany terminarz Mistrzostw Świata 2011" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 2010-11-26. http://www.sportowefakty.pl/zuzel/2010/11/26/zakutalizowany-terminarz-mistrzostw-swiata-2011/. Retrieved 2010-12-26. 
  3. ^ "IMŚJ: Zwycięstwo Jensena, awans Dudka i Zmarzlika" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 4 Jun 2011. http://www.sportowefakty.pl/zuzel/2011/06/04/imsj-zwyciestwo-jensena-awans-dudka-i-zmarzlika/. Retrieved 10 Jun 2011. 
  4. ^ "Rewelacyjny Łoktajew, czterech Polaków z awansem - relacja z gnieźnieńskiego półfinału IMŚJ" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 25 Jun 2011. http://www.sportowefakty.pl/zuzel/2011/06/25/rewelacyjny-loktajew-czterech-polakow-z-awansem-relacja-z-gn/. Retrieved 1 Jul 2011. 
  5. ^ "Ballot Final 1". FIM-live.com. http://www.fim-live.com/fileadmin/alfresco/Ballot_Poole.pdf. Retrieved 21 Jul 2011. 
  6. ^ "Ballot Final 2". FIM-live.com. http://www.fim-live.com/fileadmin/alfresco/Ballot_Holsted.pdf. Retrieved 8 Aug 2011. 
  7. ^ "Ballot Final 2 (II)". FIM-live.com. http://www.fim-live.com/fileadmin/alfresco/Ballot_Holsted_II.pdf. Retrieved 22 Aug 2011. 
  8. ^ "Ballot Final 3". FIM-live.com. http://www.fim-live.com/fileadmin/alfresco/Ballot_Pardubice.pdf. Retrieved 13 Sep 2011. 
  9. ^ "Ballot Final 4". FIM-live.com. http://www.fim-live.com/fileadmin/alfresco/Ballot_Gniezno_Final.pdf. Retrieved 20 Sep 2011.