2018 Speedway Grand Prix

2018 Speedway Grand Prix
Season details
DatesMay 12 – October 6
Events10
Cities10
Countries7
Riders15 permanents
1 wild card(s)
2 track reserves
Heats230 (in 10 events)
Winners
Champion GBR Tai Woffinden
Runner-up POL Bartosz Zmarzlik
3rd place SWE Fredrik Lindgren

The 2018 Speedway Grand Prix season was the 24th season of the Speedway Grand Prix era, and decided the 73rd FIM Speedway World Championship.[1][2] It was the eighteenth series under the promotion of Benfield Sports International, an IMG company.

The world title was won by Tai Woffinden, who finished 10 points ahead of Bartosz Zmarzlik in second with Fredrik Lindgren taking the bronze medal. It was Woffinden's third world title, following his wins in 2013 and 2015, making him the most successful British rider in history. Defending champion Jason Doyle finished the season in seventh place.

Qualification

For the 2018 season there were 15 permanent riders, joined at each Grand Prix by one wild card and two track reserves.

The top eight riders from the 2017 championship qualified automatically. Those riders were joined by the three riders who qualified via the Grand Prix Challenge.

The final four riders were nominated by series promoters, Benfield Sports International, following the completion of the 2017 season.[3]

Qualified riders

# Riders 2017 place GP Ch place Appearance Previous appearances in series
69 Jason Doyle 1 4th 2015–2017
692 Patryk Dudek 2 3 2nd 2016, 2017
108 Tai Woffinden 3 7th 2010, 2011, 2013–2017
71 Maciej Janowski 4 4th 2008, 2012, 2014, 2015–2017
95 Bartosz Zmarzlik 5 3rd 2012–2015, 2016–2017
89 Emil Sayfutdinov 6 7th 2009–2013, 2017
55 Matej Žagar 7 12 8th 2003–2005, 2006–2007, 2008–2009, 2011, 2013–2017
66 Fredrik Lindgren 8 9th 2004, 2006–2007, 2008–2014, 2016, 2017
54 Martin Vaculík 9 17 3rd 2012, 2013, 2017
23 Chris Holder 10 9th 2010–2017
45 Greg Hancock 14 24th 1995–2017
110 Nicki Pedersen 20 18th 2000, 2001–2017
59 Przemysław Pawlicki 29 1 1st 2010, 2012, 2017
222 Artem Laguta 2 2nd 2011
111 Craig Cook 32 4 1st 2013–2015, 2017

Qualified substitutes

The following riders were nominated as substitutes:

# Riders 2017 place GP Ch place
88 Niels Kristian Iversen 15
225 Václav Milík Jr. 16 8
53 Linus Sundström 32
133 Maksym Drabik
46 Max Fricke 18

Calendar

The 2018 season consisted of 10 events, two less than the 2017 series.[4]

Round Date City and venue Winner Runner-up 3rd placed 4th placed Results
1 May 12 Warsaw, Poland
Stadion Narodowy
Tai Woffinden Maciej Janowski Fredrik Lindgren Artem Laguta results
2 May 26 Prague, Czech Republic
Markéta Stadium
Fredrik Lindgren Patryk Dudek Emil Sayfutdinov Tai Woffinden results
3 June 30 Horsens, Denmark
CASA Arena
Tai Woffinden Artem Laguta Greg Hancock Jason Doyle results
4 July 7 Hallstavik, Sweden
HZ Bygg Arena
Maciej Janowski Fredrik Lindgren Bartosz Zmarzlik Tai Woffinden results
5 July 21 Cardiff, Great Britain
Principality Stadium
Bartosz Zmarzlik Tai Woffinden Maciej Janowski Greg Hancock results
6 August 11 Målilla, Sweden
G&B Arena
Nicki Pedersen Matej Žagar Fredrik Lindgren Martin Vaculík results
7 August 25 Gorzów Wielkopolski, Poland
Edward Jancarz Stadium
Martin Vaculík Bartosz Zmarzlik Tai Woffinden Patryk Dudek results
8 September 8 Krško, Slovenia
Stadion Matije Gubca
Patryk Dudek Jason Doyle Greg Hancock Fredrik Lindgren results
9 September 22 Teterow, Germany
Bergring Arena
Tai Woffinden Jason Doyle Bartosz Zmarzlik Greg Hancock results
10 October 6 Toruń, Poland
Rose Motoarena
Tai Woffinden Artem Laguta Emil Sayfutdinov Niels-Kristian Iversen results

Final Classification

[5]

Qualifies for next season's Grand Prix series
Full-time Grand Prix rider
Wild card, track reserve or qualified reserve
Pos. Rider Points POL
CZE
DEN
SWE
GBR
SCA
PL2
SVN
GER
PL3
(108) Tai Woffinden (C) 139 15 16 18 16 16 10 12 5 16 15
(95) Bartosz Zmarzlik 129 9 4 10 13 19 14 18 12 15 15
(66) Fredrik Lindgren 109 16 16 7 15 7 13 2 13 9 11
4 (71) Maciej Janowski 104 13 11 5 18 12 11 9 10 9 6
5 (45) Greg Hancock 102 8 7 16 10 12 3 10 15 12 9
6 (222) Artem Laguta 97 13 8 12 8 6 6 13 7 4 20
7 (69) Jason Doyle 93 5 9 12 9 5 4 9 17 16 7
8 (89) Emil Sayfutdinov 89 8 15 11 14 8 6 3 5 8 11
9 (692) Patryk Dudek 84 10 14 6 6 10 10 12 16
10 (55) Matej Žagar 79 9 7 5 7 6 16 11 12 6
11 (110) Nicki Pedersen 74 2 8 12 3 6 15 6 7 8 7
12 (23) Chris Holder 65 10 5 9 7 7 5 0 10 7 5
13 (54) Martin Vaculík 52 3 1 3 10 18 9 0 8
14 (88) Niels-Kristian Iversen 36 4 5 5 12 10
15 (59) Przemysław Pawlicki 36 3 5 5 1 10 3 3 2 3 1
16 (111) Craig Cook 30 2 2 2 3 9 3 4 5 0
17 (16) Vaclav Milik 11 6 5
18 (16) Szymon Woźniak 8 8
19 (16) Krzysztof Kasprzak 7 7
20 (16) Andreas Jonsson 7 7
21 (16) Peter Ljung 5 5
22 (16) Michael Jepsen Jensen 4 4
23 (17) Oliver Berntzon 3 3
24 (18) Kevin Wölbert 3 3
25 (17) Maksym Drabik 2 2
26 (18) Bartosz Smektała 2 2
27 (16) Kai Huckenbeck 2 2
28 (16) Daniel Kaczmarek 2 2
29 (17) Mikkel Michelsen 1 1
30 (16) Robert Lambert 1 1
31 (18) Joel Kling 1 1
32 (17) Martin Smolinski 1 1
33 (18) Mikkel Bech Jensen 0 0
34 (17) Dan Bewley 0 0
35 (16) Matic Ivačič 0 0
36 (17) Nick Škorja 0 0
37 (17) Igor Kopeć-Sobczyński 0 0
Pos. Rider Points POL
CZE
DEN
SWE
GBR
SCA
PL2
SVN
GER
PL3

See also

References

  1. ^ "WORLD INDIVIDUAL FINAL - RIDER INDEX". British Speedway. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Speedway riders, history and results". wwosbackup. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  3. ^ "2018 SGP Wildcards". SGP. Archived from the original on November 3, 2017.
  4. ^ "2018 FIM Speedway World Championship calendar". SGP. Archived from the original on May 3, 2011.
  5. ^ "2018 FIM Speedway World Championship standings". SGP. Archived from the original on May 13, 2018.