Great Britain national speedway team
Great Britain | |
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Team manager | Alun Rossiter |
Team captain | Tai Woffinden |
Nation colour | Blue |
SWC Wins | 9 |
Squad |
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The Great Britain Speedway Team (also known as GB Speedway Team) is one of the major teams in international speedway. The team is managed by former rider and Swindon Robins manager Alun Rossiter and captained by the 2018 Speedway World Champion Tai Woffinden.
Contents
1 Speedway World Cup
2 New Era
3 Speedway of Nations
4 Return of Test Matches
4.1 Wins as Great Britain
4.2 Wins as England
5 U-21 Speedway World Cup
6 Titles
7 Famous British riders
8 References
9 External links
Speedway World Cup
The England national speedway team has won the Speedway World Team Cup on five occasions with the Great Britain side winning four times. They were a major force in the 1970s, winning five consecutive tournaments, two as England and three as Great Britain. Key riding members of the title wins include Peter Collins (five wins), Malcolm Simmons (four wins), New Zealand-born Ivan Mauger, Dave Jessup and Ray Wilson (all three wins). The cup has eluded them since 1989, although they came close in 2000, missing out when Mark Loram fell in a race-off, and 2004 where a team of Mark Loram, Lee Richardson, Gary Havelock, David Norris and Scott Nicholls missed out by one point. Both narrow defeats were at the hands of Sweden and both in somewhat controversial fashion.
Prior to 1974, the Great Britain team often consisted of riders from other Commonwealth Nations including Australia and New Zealand.
New Era
In 2018, the commercial rights for the Great Britain Speedway Team were acquired on a multi-year deal by a team led by Robert Painter and Vicky Blackwell. A new management team was formed and Tai Woffinden, who made himself unavailable for Great Britain selection in 2016, returned to the team as captain.
Speedway of Nations
In June 2018, Great Britain competed as one of 15 nations in the inaugural Speedway of Nations tournament. The new format, which replaced the Speedway World Cup, saw each country field a team of three riders in pairs competition, with two opening rounds followed by a two-day final.
GB raced on home soil in Event Two at the National Speedway Stadium against Sweden, Australia, Czech Republic, Italy, France and Finland with the top three teams joining the final hosts Poland and the top three from Event One (Teterow, Germany).
Great Britain finished second on the night, behind Sweden, with Woffinden scoring 14 points, youngster Robert Lambert 8 and Craig Cook 1.
They were joined in the final by Poland, Denmark, Germany, Russia, Sweden and Australia. The team with the highest points total over two days (42 races) would head straight to the Grand Final, racing against the winner of a race-off between 2nd and 3rd place.
Britain topped the leaderboard after Day One and again after Day Two, but Russia were able to secure a 3-3 in the Grand Final to leave Britain with a silver medal.
Woffinden was the event top scorer with an astonishing 38 points over the two days, while Lambert scored a vital 11.
Return of Test Matches
In August 2018, Great Britain hosted a top-level international test match for the first time in over 15 years when they took on Australia at Glasgow's Peugeot Ashfield Stadium.
Britain were defeated in front of a large crowd as Australia's superior depth showed.
The seven man team comprised Woffinden, Lambert, Cook, Adam Ellis, Daniel Bewley, Chris Harris and Steven Worrall.
Wins as Great Britain
Year | Venue | Standings (Pts) | GB Riders and Pts | |
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1968 | Wembley | 1. GREAT BRITAIN (40) 2. Sweden (30) 3. Poland (19) 4. Czechoslovakia (7) | Ivan Mauger (NZ) | 12 |
Nigel Boocock | 10 | |||
Martin Ashby | 8 | |||
Barry Briggs (NZ) | 7 | |||
Norman Hunter | 3 | |||
1971 | Wroclaw | 1. GREAT BRITAIN (37) 2. Soviet Union (22) 3. Poland (19) 4. Sweden (18) | Ray Wilson | 12 |
Ivan Mauger (NZ) | 10 | |||
Jim Airey (AUS) | 9 | |||
Barry Briggs (NZ) | 6 | |||
Ronnie Moore (NZ) | - | |||
1972 | Olching | 1. GREAT BRITAIN (36) 2. Soviet Union (21) 3. Poland (21) 4. Sweden (18) | Ivan Mauger (NZ) | 11 |
John Louis | 9 | |||
Terry Betts | 9 | |||
Ray Wilson | 8 | |||
Ronnie Moore (NZ) | - | |||
1973 | Wembley | 1. GREAT BRITAIN (37) 2. Sweden (31) 3. Soviet Union (20) 4. Poland (8) | Peter Collins | 12 |
Terry Betts | 9 | |||
Malcolm Simmons | 8 | |||
Ray Wilson | 8 | |||
Dave Jessup | - |
Wins as England
Year | Venue | Standings (Pts) | Eng Riders and Pts | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | Chorzow | 1. ENGLAND (42) 2. Sweden (31) 3. Poland (13) 4. Soviet Union (10) | Peter Collins | 12 |
John Louis | 12 | |||
Dave Jessup | 10 | |||
Malcolm Simmons | 8 | |||
Ray Wilson | - | |||
1975 | Norden | 1. ENGLAND (41) 2. Soviet Union (29) 3. Sweden (17) 4. Poland (9) | Peter Collins | 12 |
Malcolm Simmons | 11 | |||
Martin Ashby | 10 | |||
John Louis | 8 | |||
Dave Jessup | - | |||
1977 | Wroclaw | 1. ENGLAND (37) 2. Poland (25) 3. Czechoslovakia (23) 4. Sweden (11) | Peter Collins | 10 |
Michael Lee | 9 | |||
Dave Jessup | 9 | |||
John Davis | 6 | |||
Malcolm Simmons | 3 | |||
1980 | Wroclaw | 1. ENGLAND (40) 2. USA (29) 3. Poland (15) 4. Czechoslovakia (12) | Michael Lee | 11 |
Chris Morton | 11 | |||
Peter Collins | 10 | |||
Dave Jessup | 8 | |||
John Davis | - | |||
1989 | Odsal | 1. ENGLAND (48) 2. Denmark (34) 3. Sweden (30) 4. USA (8) | Jeremy Doncaster | 13 |
Paul Thorp | 12 | |||
Kelvin Tatum | 12 | |||
Simon Wigg | 11 | |||
Simon Cross | 0 |
U-21 Speedway World Cup
Year | Place | Pts. | Riders |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | - | - | 3rd place in Qualifying Round 1 |
2006 | - | - | 3rd place in Qualifying Round 1 |
2007 | 2 | 36 | Edward Kennett (14), Lewis Bridger (11), James Wright (6), Daniel King (5), Tai Woffinden |
2008 | - | - | 3rd place in Qualifying Round 1 |
Titles
Preceded by Sweden | World Champions 1968 (1st title) | Succeeded by Poland |
Preceded by Sweden | World Champions 1971 (2nd title) 1972 (3rd title) 1973 (4th title) 1974 (5th title) 1975 (6th title) | Succeeded by Australia |
Preceded by Australia | World Champions 1977 (7th title) | Succeeded by Denmark |
Preceded by New Zealand | World Champions 1980 (8th title) | Succeeded by Denmark |
Preceded by Denmark | World Champions 1989 (9th title) | Succeeded by USA |
Famous British riders
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References
External links
- BSPA Website