Stan Williams (speedway rider)

Stan Williams
Personal information
Nationality British
Date of birth 1917
Place of birth    Leicester
Current club information
Career history
Sheffield
Coventry
1938–1939, 1946–1949
1950–1953
Individual honours
Team honours
British Speedway Cup (Div 2) 1947

Stan Williams (born 1917) was a British motorcycle speedway rider for Sheffield and Coventry.

Born in Leicester, Williams started grasstrack racing at the age of seventeen, pushing his bike the eighteen miles from Leicester to Nottingham to take part in his first race.[1][2] His first speedway experience was from practice sessions at the Leicester Super stadium, later practising at Dagenham.[1] He was signed by Sheffield in 1938, suffering mechanical problems in his first season that saw him close to giving up, but he developed greatly the following year, working under Bluey Wilkinson, including beating Lionel Van Praag in a race at Harringay and reaching the semi-final of the World Championship.[2]

After serving in the Royal Air Force during World War II, he returned to Sheffield as team captain in 1946, leading the team to a second place finish in the Northern League.[1][2] A broken ankle in 1946 and a broken wrist in 1947 limited his racing, and he spent much of his time tutoring his younger brother Len, who broke into the Sheffield team in 1947.[1]

Williams stayed with Sheffield until the end of the 1949 season, moving on to Coventry Bees at the start of 1950. He spent four seasons with Coventry before retiring in 1953.[3] He later returned to Coventry as team manager. In the 1960s he managed Newport Wasps.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Morgan, Tom (1949) Who's Who in Speedway 1949, Sport-in-Print, London, p. 74-75
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Storey, Basil (1947) "Bluey's" Protége Who Made Good", in Speedway Favourites, Sport-in-Print, London, p. 28
  3. "Coventry A to Z", coventrybees.co, retrieved 2012-02-11