2004 Sidecarcross World Championship






































2004 Sidecarcross World Championship

Season

Grands Prix
14

Start date
21 March

End date
5 September

Drivers

Champions

Netherlands Daniël Willemsen
Latvia Kaspars Stupelis

Sidecarcross des Nations

Germany Germany

Chronology

Previous season

Next season

2003

2005

The 2004 FIM Sidecarcross World Championship, the 25th edition of the competition, started on 21 March 2004 and finished after fourteen race weekends on 5 September 2004 with Daniël Willemsen and Kaspars Stupelis taking out the title once more. For Willemsen, it was his third world championship while it was the second for Stupelis.[1]


The season saw the cancellation of the Russian GP in Moscow on 15 August because of heavy rainfall, thereby reducing the schedule to thirteen GP's and 26 races.[2]




Contents






  • 1 Overview


  • 2 Format


  • 3 Retirements


  • 4 Calendar


  • 5 Classification


    • 5.1 Riders




  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





Overview


The 2004 season was the 25th edition of the Sidecarcross World Championship. It resulted in a third world championship for Daniël Willemsen, his second in a row with passenger Kaspars Stupelis. Five time world champion Kristers Sergis, with Sven Verbrugge as his passenger, was their main rival early on in the competition. An injury to Sergis meant however, the pair would miss five race weekends and be out of contention for the championship. After this, Willemsen and Stupelis won the championship almost undisputed with second-placed Marko Happich more than 150 points behind in second place. For the following season, 2005, Willemsen and Sergis would exchange passenger, with Sven Verbrugge returning to Willemsen, who he had raced with before, while Sergis and Stupelis would form an all-Latvian team.


The fourteen GP's of the season were held in eleven countries, Spain, France (2x), Netherlands, Germany (2x), Italy, Estonia, Latvia (2x), Croatia, Bulgaria, Russia and Belgium. It was the first time that a GP was to be held in Russia.



Format


Every Grand Prix weekend is split into two races, both held on the same day. This means, the 2004 season with its fourteen Grand Prix had originally 28 races. Each race lasts for 30 minutes plus two laps. The two races on a weekend actually get combined to determine an overall winner. While this overall winners receives no extra WC points, they usually are awarded a special trophy.


The first twenty teams of each race score competition points. The point system for the 2004 season was as follows:



















































Place
Points
1
25
2
22
3
20
4
18
5
16
6
15
7
14
8
13
9
12
10
11















































Place
Points
11
10
12
9
13
8
14
7
15
6
16
5
17
4
18
3
19
2
20
1



Retirements


At the end of the 2004 season a number of long-term competitors retired from the World Championship, the most successful of those being Estonian Are Kaurit, with a third place in 2004 as his best result and active since 1993, and Dutch Wilfred van Werven, third placed in 2002 and 2003 and active since 1996.[3][4][5]



Calendar


The calendar for the 2004 season:[1]





























































































































Date

Place

Race winners

GP winner

Source
21 March

Spain Talavera

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
4 April

France Castelnau

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Result

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge
12 April

Netherlands Oldebroek

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
25 April

Germany Aufenau

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
9 May

Italy Asti

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
31 May

France Brou

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
6 June

Germany Pflückuff

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
13 June

Estonia Jaanikese

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
20 June

Latvia Cēsis

Russia Evgeny Scherbinin / Sergey Sosnovskikh

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
11 July

Croatia Zabok

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Germany Marko Happich / Thomas Weinmann

Result

Germany Marko Happich / Thomas Weinmann
18 July

Bulgaria Samokov

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
8 August

Latvia Ķegums

Latvia Kristers Sergis / Sven Verbrugge

Germany Marko Happich / Thomas Weinmann

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
15 August

Russia Moscow

cancelled 1
5 September

Belgium Neeroeteren

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis

Result

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Kaspars Stupelis
19 September

Germany Rudersberg

Germany Germany


  • The Sidecarcross des Nations is a non-championship event but part of the calendar and is denoted by a light blue background in the table above.

  • Flags for passengers not shown.


  • 1 Cancelled after heavy rain, only an exhibition race was held, won by Marco Happich / Thomas Weinmann, which didn't count towards the world championship.[2]



Classification



Riders


Out of 56 teams in the points, the top-twenty of the 2004 season were:[6]






















































































































































































































































































Driver / Passenger

Equipment

No.

Points

GP wins

GP 2nd

GP 3rd

Race wins

Race 2nd

Race 3rd

1

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Latvia Kaspars Stupelis

Zabel-VMC
1
572
9
1
1
18
4
1

2

Germany Marko Happich / Thomas Weinmann
Zabel-VMC
7
419
2
4
1
1
8
6

3

Estonia Are Kaurit / Jurgen Jakk

KTM-AYR
4
391

1
1

3
3

4

Russia Evgeni Scherbinin / Sergei Sosnovskikh
Zabel-APZ
11
385

2
2
1
3
4

5

United Kingdom Stuart Brown / Luke Peters
Zabel-VMC
5
374

2
3

4
3

6

Netherlands Eric Schrijver / Christian Verhagen

MTH-EML
10
274





1

7

Latvia Kristers Serģis / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
MTH-BSU
2
246
2
2
1
6
1
2

8

Germany Werner Wittmann / Czech Republic Premsyl Novotny
Yamaha-AYR
12
231


1


3

9

Belgium Jan Hendrickx / Tim Smeuninx
MTH-BSU
6
224







10

Austria Bertram Martin / Switzerland Bruno Kaelin
Zabel-VMC
14
215







11

Belgium Joris Hendrickx / Roger van de Lagemaat
MTH-BSU
41
211







12

Germany Frank Hofmann / Belgium Ludo Somers
Zabel-VMC
16
203







13

Netherlands Marcel Willemsen / Rene Boon
KTM-VMC
32
191







14

Switzerland Andy Burglar / Meinrad Schelbert
KTM-Spatech
25
164


1

1


15

France Benoit Beaumont / Netherlands Henry van de Wiel
MTH-BSU
8
142


1


2

16

Latvia Māris Rupeiks / Haralds Kurpnieks
Zabel-AYR
9
124







17

Sweden Henrik Soderquist / Tobias Sylwan
KTM-VMC
26
122

1
1

2
1

18

Germany Josef Brustmann / Stefan Urich
KTM-NMP
20
100







19

Netherlands Carlo van Duijnhoven / Tom van Duijnhoven
MTH-BSU
13
99







20

Belgium Nicky Pulinx / Dagwin Sabbe
KTM-VMC
118
96







  • Equipment listed is motor and frame.


References





  1. ^ ab FIM Sidecarcross World Championship – 2004 Calendar Archived 2012-06-09 at the Wayback Machine FIM website, accessed: 5 August 2011


  2. ^ ab The World Championship on Sidecarcross.com accessed: 31 October 2009


  3. ^ Official World Championship classification 2000–present Archived 2013-10-16 at the Wayback Machine FIM website, accessed: 9 November 2014


  4. ^ ARE KAURIT GP RECORD The John Davey Pages, accessed: 9 November 2014


  5. ^ WILFRED VAN WERVEN GP RECORD The John Davey Pages, accessed: 9 November 2014


  6. ^ FIM SIDECAR MOTOCROSS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP: Classification 2004 Archived 2012-06-09 at the Wayback Machine FIM website, accessed: 13 August 2011




External links



  • The World Championship on Sidecarcross.com

  • The John Davey Grand Prix Pages – Results of all GP's up until 2005

  • FIM Sidecar Motocross World Championship 2010








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