2012 Speedway Under-21 World Championship

World Under-21 Championship
Michael Jepsen Jensen

The 2012 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship was the 36th edition of the FIM World motorcycle speedway Under-21 Championships.[1][2]

The final was run over a series of seven races between 21 July and November 2011. Michael Jepsen Jensen became the new champion.[3][4][5]

Qualification

Four qualifying rounds saw eight riders from each round progressing to the semi-final round. The top seven riders from both semi-finals were automatically qualified for the Final series.

Semi-finals

Final series

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

# Date Venue Winners Runner-up 3rd place
1 21 July Santa Marina Stadium, Lonigo Michael Jepsen Jensen Przemysław Pawlicki Bartosz Zmarzlik
2 4 August Petišovci Stadium, Lendava Maciej Janowski Mikkel Bech Jensen Patryk Dudek
3 17 August Brandon Stadium, Coventry Michael Jepsen Jensen Przemysław Pawlicki Mikkel Bech Jensen
4 15 September The Swallow's Nest, Tarnów Michael Jepsen Jensen Patryk Dudek Maciej Janowski
5 13 October Svítkov Stadium, Pardubice Maciej Janowski Michael Jepsen Jensen Aleksandr Loktaev
6 3 November Antonio Miranda Circuit, Bahía Blanca Michael Jepsen Jensen Maciej Janowski Pontus Aspgren
7 10 November Antonio Miranda Circuit, Bahía Blanca Maciej Janowski Michael Jepsen Jensen Mikkel Bech Jensen

Classification

The meeting classification was 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) were credited also as World Championship points. The FIM Speedway Under 21 World Champion was 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 better placed rider.

Pos. Rider Points
Michael Jepsen Jensen 90 12 10 15 14 13 13 13
Maciej Janowski 89 11 13 10 13 14 13 15
Mikkel Bech Jensen 75 11 12 11 6 11 11 13
4 Mikkel Michelsen 59 9 7 8 10 6 8 11
5 Nicklas Porsing 50 8 7 9 8 11 7
6 Przemysław Pawlicki 43 12 9 12 10
7 Nikolaj Busk Jakobsen 41 9 2 5 3 7 7 8
8 Pontus Aspgren 40 8 1 8 12 11
9 Václav Milík, Jr. 39 4 6 1 2 5 10 11
10 Aleksandr Loktaev 37 6 8 10 13
11 Sam Masters 37 6 10 5 8 8
12 Patryk Dudek 30 11 6 13
13 Bartosz Zmarzlik 29 11 9 9
14 Tobiasz Musielak 25 5 8 2 10
15 Dakota North 21 5 8 8
16 Piotr Pawlicki Jr. 21 9 8 4
17 Damian Adamczak 18 2 8 3 5
18 Kyle Newman 10 10
19 Michal Skurla 10 5 5
20 Andzejs Lebedevs 9 9
21 Facundo Albin 8 4 4
22 Jakub Jamróg 7 7
23 Eduard Krčmář 6 6
23 Kacper Gomólski 6 6
25 Facundo Cuello 5 2 3
25 Tom Perry 5 5
27 Zdenek Holub 4 4
28 Fernando Garcia 4 2 2
29 Jan Holub III 3 3
30 Sebastian Clemete 3 2 1
31 Michele Paco Castagna 2 2
31 Roman Cejka 2 2
33 Alejandro Iglesias 1 1 0
33 Matic Ivacic 1 1
33 Nicolas Vicentin 1 1
36 Dino Kovacic 0 0
36 Ernst Koza 0 0

See also

References

  1. ^ "Speedway riders, history and results". wwosbackup. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  2. ^ "World Under 21 Championship". Edinburgh Speedway. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  3. ^ "Projekt kalendarza FIM na 2012 rok - finał DMŚJ w Polsce, IMŚJ poznamy w Argentynie" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 12 April 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  4. ^ "Speedway Junioren Weltmeisterschaft (U-21)". Speedway Yesterday. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  5. ^ "World U21 winners". Speedweek. Retrieved 14 March 2024.