CIERNIAK TAKES CHARGE OF SGP2 TITLE RACE WITH CARDIFF WIN

Polish racer Mateusz Cierniak stormed to victory in the FIM SGP2 of Great Britain at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium as he took pole position in the race for FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship gold. The Lublin star rounded off Cardiff’s 20th-anniversary Speedway GP weekend by topping the scorechart on 12 race points after five heats, winning his opening four races, before looping his bike at the start line in his final heat. Despite that, Cierniak’s four race wins were enough to see him win the round on countback after the FIM Jury elected to halt racing after 20 heats due to concerns over track conditions. Cierniak still claims the maximum 20 championship points, meaning he has now won back-to-back rounds after also taking victory in the FIM SGP2 of Czech Republic on May 27. He topped the Cardiff podium on countback ahead of Danish racer Kevin Juhl Pedersen, who also scored 12 race points. His fellow countryman Benjamin Basso was third after registering 11 race points – tying with Jan Kvech, but beating the Czech star to the last podium spot on countback. Cierniak heads into the title-deciding FIM SGP2 of Poland in Torun on September 30 with a massive 12-point lead at the top of the standings on 40 overall. This means a semi-final appearance in his home round would be enough to secure the FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship – the first of the SGP2 era under new global promoter Discovery Sports Events. The Tarnow-born star was delighted with how he handled some challenging track conditions in Cardiff to keep his bid for a hat-trick of SGP2 round wins alive. He said: “Maybe I will make it a hat-trick. We will see. There is a long way to go before Torun. Now I have a Polish Championship round tomorrow in Krosno, so I must prepare for it and also the play-offs in the Polish league. “Today was very hard. The track was very hard, so everyone had to have full focus on everything we were doing on the track. I was happy with the end result. The result is good for me and I would like to say thank you to everyone.” Runner-up Juhl Pedersen crashed out of the opening SGP2 round in Prague, suffering a head injury. So he was pleased to show his skills on Cardiff’s grand stage and earn a huge 18 points to move up to fourth place on 22. He said: “Today was much better. In Prague, I fell off and hit my head so hard that I couldn’t race for a week afterwards. I actually think the track today was better than Prague.” Juhl Pedersen is keen to make the most of his final SGP2 event in Torun next month as he will be ineligible for the competition in 2023. Then he is determined to push on into Europe’s top leagues. He said: “This is my last year as an under-21. I see myself going forward very much. I am learning my craft in the Polish Second Division and I am looking to get into the higher leagues, so we will see what happens.” Basso enjoyed a rough end to his night when Kvech brought him down in heat 20 – their last race of the night. The Czech was holding second place, which would have been enough to give him victory on the night ahead of Cierniak with 13 race points. His exclusion, followed by Basso’s win in the re-run, saw the Dane pip him to third spot. “I actually don’t know what he was thinking,” Basso said. “I only needed a second place to go through to the semis and I actually felt I gave him enough space just to pass me on the inside. He took my foot, so I actually don’t know what that was all about.” Basso has now enjoyed around a year of racing in the UK, starting with Poole last summer, helping them to the SGB Championship league and cup double. He moved to their rivals Glasgow for this year, as well as competing for Peterborough in the SGB Premiership. The Dane admits this UK experience paid dividends on a technical Cardiff track. He said: “It most definitely did, and I still feel like I am only learning. It’s only my first full season in the UK. I definitely think racing in the UK has given me an advantage tonight because the tracks are a lot different to what we are used to in Denmark.” Next up on the FIM Speedway calendar is a blockbuster double-header, featuring the FIM Speedway GP of Poland – Wroclaw on August 27, with SGP3, the FIM Speedway Youth World Championship taking place 24 hours earlier on August 26 at the legendary Olympic Stadium. SGP2 CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS: 1 Mateusz Cierniak 40, 2 Jan Kvech 28, 3 Benjamin Basso 25, 4 Kevin Juhl Pedersen 22, 5 Petr Chlupac 20, 6 Wiktor Lampart 19, 7 Francis Gusts 18, 8 Jakub Miskowiak 18, 9 Jonas Knudsen 14, 10 Timi Salonen 12, 11 Gustav Grahn 12, 12 Tom Brennan 12, 13 Leon Flint 10, 14 Norick Blodorn 9, 15 Casper Henriksson 8, 16 Mateusz Swidnicki 8, 17 Jason Edwards 6, 18 Drew Kemp 5, 19 Celina Liebmann 3, 20 Daniel Klima 2, 21 Bruno Belan 1. FIM SGP2 OF GREAT BRITAIN SCORES: 1 Mateusz Cierniak 20, 2 Kevin Juhl Pedersen 18, 3 Benjamin Basso 16, 4 Jan Kvech 14, 5 Tom Brennan 12, 6 Wiktor Lampart 11, 7 Leon Flint 10, 8 Norick Blodorn 9, 9 Jakub Miskowiak 8, 10 Gustav Grahn 7, 11 Jason Edwards 6, 12 Drew Kemp 5, 13 Petr Chlupac 4, 14 Jonas Knudsen 3, 15 Casper Henriksson 2, 16 Mateusz Swidnicki 1, 17 Daniel Klima 0.

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FLINT JOINS BRENNAN IN CARDIFF SGP2 SHOWDOWN ON SUNDAY

Great Britain will now have two riders in Sunday’s FIM SGP2 of Great Britain starting line-up as Leon Flint steps into the main 16 alongside Tom Brennan. British Under-21 champion Brennan was originally due to serve as wild card for the biggest FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship round ever staged, as the action takes place at Cardiff’s iconic Principality Stadium (1pm start). But SGP2 first reserve Brennan will now replace series regular Timi Salonen in the line-up after the flying Finnish racer suffered a broken collarbone in the FIM Speedway of Nations Final at Vojens on July 30. With Brennan no longer the wild card, the No.16 race jacket opened up and British bosses have nominated Flint. The 19-year-old steps into the line-up for the biggest meeting of his career so far. Flint has enjoyed a stellar season with his local club Berwick in the SGB Championship, as well as racing for Wolverhampton in Britain’s top flight, the SGB Premiership. The recently-crowned British Under-19 champion served as Great Britain’s No.3 reserve for the SON2 FIM Team Speedway Under-21 World Championship event in Vojens on July 29. Having missed out on taking a ride as the Brits bagged bronze, Flint will be determined to take his chance to shine in Cardiff. With Flint vacating the No.18 track reserve spot, his place is taken by Jason Edwards, with Drew Kemp remaining at No.17. Promising Essex-born racer Edwards competes for three UK clubs – King’s Lynn in the SGB Premiership, SGB Championship side Redcar and National League club Mildenhall. All FIM Speedway GP of Great Britain – Cardiff tickets include entry to Sunday’s FIM SGP2 of Great Britain as the city celebrates its 20th Speedway GP event in style. Tickets are still available online until 12:00 BST on Thursday here: https://bit.ly/3ixX9wQ After that, they can only be purchased from the WRU Shop at the Principality Stadium, between gates three and four on Westgate Street on Friday (13:00-17:30 BST) and Saturday (09:30-17:30 BST).

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CHAMPION BRENNAN FLIES BRITISH FLAG IN CARDIFF SGP2 EVENT

Great Britain’s FIM Speedway of Nations world champion Tom Brennan returns to the world stage at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium after being named as wild card for the FIM SGP2 of Great Britain on Sunday, August 14. The 2021 British Under-21 champion lines up in the No.16 race jacket in round two of the FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship series – rebranded as SGP2 for this season as part of new global promoter Discovery Sports Events’ vision to develop and shine a spotlight on the sport’s junior stars. Cardiff’s Principality Stadium is comfortably the biggest and best stadium ever to host a round of the sport’s under-21 championship as the SGP2 stars compete less than 24 hours after the FIM Speedway GP of Great Britain on Saturday, August 13 at 5pm. The SGP2 round is part of an action-packed weekend celebrating Speedway GP’s 20th visit to the Welsh capital, and Brennan will be determined to fly the British flag in style. He joined forces with Speedway GP trio Tai Woffinden, Robert Lambert and Dan Bewley to lift the FIM SON world title in Manchester last October – winning Britain’s first world team title since 1989. Helping to end that 32-year wait puts the 21-year-old into the history books and now he will be determined to become the first-ever SGP2 winner in Cardiff. Brennan races for the Belle Vue Aces in Britain’s SGB Premiership, as well as Scottish side Glasgow Tigers in the SGB Championship. He is joined in the FIM SGP2 of Great Britain by track reserves Drew Kemp and Leon Flint, who line up at No.17 and No.18 respectively. Tickets for the FIM British Speedway GP include entry to Sunday’s SGP2 event, which gets underway at 1pm UK time. To secure your spot in Cardiff, book your tickets here now: https://bit.ly/3ixX9wQ Photo: Taylor Lanning

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TICKETS FOR TORUN SPEEDWAY GP & SGP2 EVENTS ON SALE NOW

Tickets for a huge double-header of FIM Speedway action in Torun on September 30 and October 1 are on sale now. The iconic Marian Rose Motoarena stages the FIM Speedway GP of Poland – Torun on Saturday, October 1 as the sport’s biggest stars go wheel to wheel in the final European round of the season. With Bartosz Zmarzlik chasing his third Speedway GP world title in four years and Torun riders Patryk Dudek, Robert Lambert, Jack Holder and Pawel Przedpelski all in action, the stakes will be high at the Motoarena. History will also be made when the first-ever SGP2 champion is crowned on Friday, September 30 as Torun stages the FIM SGP2 of Poland, the final round of the FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship. With current SGP2 championship leader Mateusz Cierniak, reigning World Under-21 champion Jakub Miskowiak, Wiktor Lampart, Mateusz Swidnicki and Wiktor Przyjemski all competing in their homeland, they will be determined to reach the rostrum when it matters most. Tickets for both the FIM Torun Speedway GP and the Torun SGP2 event are available online here now: https://kstorun.kupbilety.pl/

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GUSTS: TIME ON MY SIDE IN SGP2

Latvian shooting star Francis Gusts insists he has time on his side in his quest to land the SGP2 title after going fastest in Prague FIM SGP2 of Czech Republic practice this afternoon. Gusts qualified for SGP2 – the revamped FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship – by winning his qualifier at Slovenian track Krsko on 14 points on May 7. And he brought that momentum to Marketa Stadium this afternoon as he clocked the fastest lap time, 15.078 seconds. His nearest rival was Poland’s Wiktor Przyjemski on 15.259 seconds, while flying Finn Timi Salonen registered 15.271 seconds and defending champion Jakub Miskowiak’s best time was 15.272 seconds as he took fourth place. Czech racer Jan Kvech was fifth on 15.280 seconds. For some of the SGP2 class of 2022, it is their last chance to lift the trophy as they will be too old to compete in the series next year. But with Gusts not celebrating his 21st birthday until February 1, 2024, he insisted: “I have some time. I am 19 years old, so in this competition I can do two more years.” Asked his goals for SGP2 this season, Gusts replied: “I hope I will finish without any crashes. Then we will see. “I will not be very sad if I lose, but of course everyone comes here to win and do their best. And I will try to do my best.” The FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship has been taken under the SGP banner by new FIM Speedway global promoter Discovery Sports Events, and rebranded as SGP2. With the under-21 stars sharing the same stage the Speedway GP riders will grace on Saturday night, Gusts is excited to be part of the action. “It’s completely different,” he said. “I have never been in an event like this. I am pretty happy that I qualified to be here and I am enjoying this event. We will have some interesting racing tonight.” Gusts is no stranger to racing in top events, having served as Latvia’s reserve rider in the FIM Speedway of Nations Final in Manchester last season. It was the country’s first-ever world final, but the youngster admits flying the Latvian flag alone in an individual event is a different challenge to being the standby man in a team meeting. “I had one heat,” he smiled. “For me, this is a tougher challenge – I am racing alone.”   PRAGUE FIM SGP2 OF CZECH REPUBLIC PRACTICE TIMES: Francis Gusts (Latvia) 15.078 Wiktor Przyjemski (Poland) 15.259 Timi Salonen (Finland) 15.271 Jakub Miskowiak (Poland) 15.272 Jan Kvech (Czech Republic) 15.280 Mateusz Cierniak (Poland) 15.339 Wiktor Lampart (Poland) 15.375 Mateusz Swidnicki (Poland) 15.376 Benjamin Basso (Denmark) 15.431 Daniel Klima (Czech Republic) 15.486 Gustav Grahn (Sweden) 15.575 Kevin Juhl Pedersen (Denmark) 15.601 Casper Henriksson (Sweden) 15.613 Petr Chlupac (Czech Republic) 15.616 Jonas Knudsen (Denmark) 15.821 Celina Liebmann (Germany) 15.916 Matous Kamenik (Czech Republic) 16.088 Bruno Belan (Czech Republic) 16.265

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