Speedway European Championship
|
Current season, competition or edition: | |
| Sport | Speedway |
|---|---|
| Founded | 2013 |
| Country | Europe |
| Most recent champion(s) |
|
| Official website |
www |
The Speedway European Championship (SEC) is an individual speedway competition consisting of a series of stand-alone events over the course of a season to determine the European champion.
History
The original European Championships were organised as part of qualification for the World speedway Championship from 1955-75. The European championship from 2011 had been organised by European Motorcycle Union (UEM). From 1955 the champion was determined in a single event. In 2012 this was replaced by a series of four finals. Regardless of that, ISEC was struggling with prestige and promotion and the best European riders were mostly avoiding this contest.[1]
On 20 December 2012 at a press conference in Warsaw, Poland it was announced that the competition would change to a format similar to the Speedway Grand Prix. The Speedway European Championship series is promoted by One Sporta Ltd. from Poland for next three seasons (2013-2015).[2]
Champions
- 1955:
Henry "Stompa" Andersen - 1956:
Ove Fundin - 1957:
Rune Sormander - 1958:
Ove Fundin - 1959:
Ove Fundin - 1960:
Marian Kaiser - 1961:
Ove Fundin - 1962:
Bjorn Knutsson - 1963:
Bjorn Knutsson - 1964:
Zbigniew Podlecki - 1965:
Ove Fundin - 1966:
Ivan Mauger - 1967:
Andrzej Wyglenda - 1968:
Pawel Waloszek - 1969:
Valeri Klementiev - 1970:
Ivan Mauger - 1971:
Ivan Mauger - 1972:
Pawel Waloszek - 1973:
Anders Michanek - 1974:
Peter Collins - 1975:
Ivan Mauger - 2001:
Bohumil Brhel - 2002:
Magnus Zetterstrom - 2003:
Krzysztof Kasprzak - 2004:
Matej Zagar - 2005:
Jesper B Jensen - 2006:
Krzysztof Jablonski - 2007:
Jurica Pavlic - 2008:
Matej Zagar - 2009:
Renat Gafurov - 2010:
Sebastian Ulamek - 2011:
Grigory Laguta - 2012:
Aleš Dryml, Jr. - 2013:
Martin Vaculik - 2014:
Emil Sayfutdinov - 2015:
Emil Sayfutdinov - 2016:
Nicki Pedersen
See also
References
- ↑ "About SEC". www.speedwayeuro.com. Retrieved 23 Feb 2013.
- ↑ "Żużlowe mistrzostwa Europy wkraczają w nową erę" (in Polish). sportowefakty.pl. 20 Dec 2012. Retrieved 23 Feb 2013.