1990 Individual Speedway World Championship
1990 Individual Speedway World Championship
|
Previous: |
1989 |
Next: |
1991 |
The 1990 Individual Speedway World Championship. The Final was held at the Odsal Stadium in Bradford, England. It would be the 28th and last time the World Final would be held in England under the traditional single meeting format.
Sweden's Per Jonsson won his only World Individual Championship to become the first Swedish World Champion since Anders Michanek in 1974. Jonsson defeated American Shawn Moran in a run-off after both finished the meeting on 13 points. Moran was later stripped of his second place by the FIM for failing a drug test taken at the Overseas Final. After Moran's disqualification, the FIM did not upgrade the placings, thus records show no second place rider for the 1990 World Final. Australian youngster Todd Wiltshire, believed by many judges to be one who would be making up the numbers in his first World Final, finished third with 12 points after sensationally winning his first two rides.
Jonsson became the first rider to win both the Under-21 and Senior Individual World Championships having previously won the 1985 Under-21 World Championship (from 1977 until 1988 the World U/21 title was known as the European U/21 Championship, though the winners have generally been acknowledged as junior World Champions).
Overseas Series
New Zealand Qualification
- First 2 from New Zealand final to Commonwealth final
Date | Venue | Winner | Runner-up | 3rd place | |
South Island Final |
?? |
Ruapuna Speedway | Mark Thorpe | David Bargh | |
|
North Island Final |
?? |
Meeanee Speedway Hawkes Bay Speedway | Craig Wilkie | Gary Allan | ?? |
|
New Zealand Final |
?? |
Ruapuna Speedway | Larry Ross | Craig Wilkie | Mark Thorpe |
|
Australian Qualification
- First 4 from Australian final to Commonwealth final
North American Final
Nordic Final
- June 9, 1990
- Linköping, Motorstadium
- First 7 to the Intercontinental Final plus 1 reserve
Commonwealth Final
* Todd Wiltshire replaced Australian qualifier Stephen Davies. David Bargh and Gary Allan replaced New Zealand qualifiers Larry Ross and Craig Wilkie
Overseas Final
* Ronnie Correy replaced Greg Hancock
Intercontinental Final
- August 12, 1990
- Fjelsted, Hele Fyns Speedway Center
- First 11 to the World Final plus 1 reserve
Pos. | Rider | Heat Scores | Total |
1 | Shawn Moran | (3,2,3,3,3) | 14 |
2 | Per Jonsson | (3,3,1,2,3) | 12 |
3 | Hans Nielsen | (2,3,3,2,1) | 11+3 |
4 | Jan O. Pedersen | (3,1,1,3,3) | 11+2 |
5 | Rick Miller | (3,1,3,1,2) | 10 |
6 | Kelvin Tatum | (2,R,3,2,2) | 9 |
7 | Ronnie Correy | (R,2,3,2,2 | 9 |
8 | Richard Knight* | (1,2,2,0,3) | 8 |
9 | Martin Dugard | (1,3,0,3,0) | 7 |
10 | Jimmy Nilsen | (2,2,2,1,0) | 7 |
11 | Todd Wiltshire | (2,0,2,0,2) | 6 |
12 | Henrik Gustafsson | (R,1,0,3,1) | 5 |
13 | Dennis Löfqvist | (1,0,1,1,1) | 4 |
14 | Troy Butler | (R,2,1,0,F) | 3 |
15 | Conny Ivarsson | (1,0,0,0,1) | 2 |
16 | Jeremy Doncaster | (0,1,0,1,0) | 2 |
Res | Brian Karger | did not ride | - |
Res | Gary Havelock | did not ride | - |
* Richard Knight replaced injured qualifier Simon Cross
Continental Final
- August 12, 1990
- Norden, Motodrom Halbemond
- First 5 to the World Final plus 1 reserve
Pos. | Rider | Heat Scores | Total |
1 | Gerd Riss | (3,2,2,3,3) | 13 |
2 | Zoltán Adorján | (2,3,1,3,3) | 12+3 |
3 | Armando Castagna | (3,3,x,3,3) | 12+2 |
4 | Roman Matousek | (3,1,3,2,2) | 11 |
5 | Zdenek Tesar | (3,0,2,3,2) | 10+3 |
6 | Antonín Kasper, Jr. | (1,3,3,2,1) | 10+2 |
7 | Sándor Tihanyi | (0,3,2,2,2) | 9 |
8 | Wojciech Zaluski | (2,1,F,1,3) | 7 |
9 | Antal Kocso | (2,2,2,0,1) | 7 |
10 | Klaus Lausch | (2,1,3,R,ns) | 6 |
11 | Bohumil Brhel | (1,2,EF,2,0) | 5 |
12 | Vladimir Kalina | (1,1,1,0,2) | 5 |
13 | Joszef Petrikovics | (0,2,1,1,1) | 5 |
14 | Tomasz Gollob | (0,0,3,1,0) | 4 |
15 | Heinrich Schatzer | (1,0,0,1,1) | 3 |
16 | Jan Krzystaniak | (0,0,1,0,0) | 1 |
World final
Pos. | Rider | Heat Scores | Total |
| Per Jonsson | (3,3,2,2,3) | 13+3 |
2 | Shawn Morana (failed drugs test) | (1,3,3,3,3) | 13+2 |
| Todd Wiltshire | (3,3,2,1,3) | 12 |
4 | Hans Nielsen | (3,1,3,2,2) | 11 |
5 | Jimmy Nilsen | (2,1,2,3,2) | 10 |
6 | Henrik Gustafsson* | (3,2,3,0,1) | 9 |
7 | Kelvin Tatum | (2,3,0,3,1) | 9 |
8 | Armando Castagna | (F,2,1,3,2) | 8 |
9 | Rick Miller | (2,2,3,1,x) | 7 |
10 | Richard Knight | (1,2,1,2,1) | 7 |
11 | Martin Dugard | (2,0,1,0,3) | 6 |
12 | Roman Matousek | (1,R,0,2,2) | 5 |
13 | Zdenek Tesar | (0,0,2,0,R) | 2 |
14 | Ronnie Correy | (1,0,x,1,0) | 2 |
15 | Zoltán Adorján | (1,R,0,1,0) | 2 |
16 | Antonín Kasper, Jr.* | (0,0,1,1,0) | 2 |
Res | Sándor Tihanyi | did not ride | - |
Res | Dennis Löfqvist | did not ride | - |
* Henrik Gustafsson and Antonín Kasper, Jr. replaced injured qualifiers Jan O. Pedersen and Gerd Riss
Notes:
- a. Shawn Moran scored 13 points and lost the run-off to Per Jonsson. However, Moran had failed a random drug and alcohol test taken three months earlier at the Overseas Final, and was subsequently disqualified from second place. The FIM did not upgrade the standings and the official records show no second place rider.
References
- ↑ Bamford, R. & Shailes, G. (2002). A History of the World Speedway Championship. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-2402-5
- Books
- Loader, Tony (1991). Loader's International Speedway Annual 1991. Tony Loader. pp. 8–18. ISSN 1036-4404.
External links
|
---|
| Speedway World Championship | | |
---|
| Speedway Grand Prix (SGP) | |
---|
| See also | |
---|
|