Nicki Pedersen

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Nicki Pedersen
Personal Information
Nationality Flag of Denmark Denmark
Date of birth April 2, 1977 (1977-04-02) (age 31)
Place of birth    Odense, Denmark
Website www.nickipedersen.com
Current Club Information
Polish League Częstochowa
Swedish League Lejonen
Danish League Holsted
Russian League Mega Lada Togliatti
Career History
Filbyterna (SWE)
Newcastle Diamonds
Gniezno (POL)
Wolverhampton Wolves
Västervik (SWE)
Grudziadz (POL)
King's Lynn Stars
Gdansk (POL)
Smederna (SWE)
Zielona Gora (POL)
Oxford Cheetahs
Eastbourne Eagles
Rybnik (POL)
Hammarby Bajen (SWE)
Stal Rzeszów (POL)
Lejonen (SWE)
Włókniarz Częstochowa (POL)
Mega Lada (RUS)
1997-1998
1998
1999
1999-2000
1999-2001
2000
2001-2002
2001
2002-2005
2002, 2004-2005
2003
2003-2007
2003
2006-2007
2006-2007
2008-
2008-
2007-
Individual Honours
World Champion
Danish Champion
Elite League Riders Champion
Danish Under-21 Champion
European Grand Prix Champion
British Grand Prix Champion
Slovenian Grand Prix Champion
Polish Grand Prix Champion
Italian Grand Prix Champion
Czech Grand Prix Champion
2003, 2007
2002, 2003, 2005, 2006
2004, 2007
1997, 1998
2002, 2007
2003
2006, 2007
2006
2007
2007
Team Honours
World Cup Winner
Polish Div Two Champion
Danish League Champion
2006
2001, 2002, 2003
1995, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2004

Nicki Pedersen (born 2 April 1977 in Odense, Denmark)[1] is a Danish motorcycle speedway rider. He was the Speedway World Champion of 2003 and 2007 and a multiple Speedway Grand Prix winner.[2]

Contents

[edit] Career Summary

[edit] League Teams

Pedersen began speedway racing aged 11 at Danish club Fjelsted. He started his Polish speedway career in 1999 with Polish second division club Startu Gniezno and has since ridden for GKM-u Grudziądz, Wybrzeża Gdańsk, ZKŻ Zielona Góra and RKM-u Rybnik. Between 2006 and 2007 he rode for Stal Rzeszów and for the 2008 Ekstraliga season he has signed for Włókniarz Częstochowa.

Pedersen rides for Lejonen in the Swedish Elitserien, and Holsted in the Danish speedway league.[3]

Nicki's career in the United Kingdom began with the Premier League team Newcastle Diamonds, before Elite League side Wolverhampton Wolves bought him for the 1999 season. He was at Wolverhampton for two years before the club loaned him out to King's Lynn, Oxford and Eastbourne. Pedersen spent four years at Eastbourne before leaving at the end of the 2007 season due to a change in ownership of the club and a reduction of the points limit for team building purposes by the BSPA.[4] Although Nicki is still an asset of Wolverhampton, he ruled out a return to the club for 2008.[5] Pedersen was left without a team in the British Elite League for the 2008 season.

[edit] Grand Prix

Pedersen took part in his first Grand Prix in 2000, as a wildcard in Denmark and impressed by finishing in fourth place. That earned him a permanent Grand Prix spot in 2001. He showed potential in the opening round in 2001, finishing third in Germany and consistent scoring left him in 11th place in the World Championship after his first full year.

Pedersen had a bad start to 2002, but secured his GP place in 2003 after recording the first win of his career in the European Grand Prix. He finished the year in 12th place despite an inconsistent season.

In 2003, he improved massively on his 2002 performance. He finished second in the opening Grand Prix of the season, and after a 10th place in the Swedish Grand Prix, Pedersen won again in Cardiff to give him a chance of becoming World Champion. Consistent high placings and four more podium finishes, including three in a row, secured the 2003 World Championship for Pedersen.

2004 was less successful for Pedersen, he failed to record a win or a podium place. He finished in fifth place in the World Championship, well behind the two leaders Tony Rickardsson and Jason Crump.

A second place in Slovenia the best of the 2005 Grand Prix season and he finished in fourth in the World Championship.

Pedersen won the opening GP meeting of the 2006 season in Slovenia, but after that he fell behind championship leaders Rickardsson and Crump. He improved to finish third in the World Championship however, after a podium in Latvia, and winning the season ending race in Poland.

Pedersen was dominant in 2007, winning four of the eleven Grand Prix, and finishing runner-up in two. He and dropped only one point in the opening two rounds and he had a run of six consecutive finals, which ended after an exclusion in the semi final in Great Britain. Pedersen won the penultimate Grand Prix in Slovenia and in doing so became the 2007 World Champion after accumulating an unassailable lead at the head of the standings.[6]

[edit] Speedway Grand Prix results

Year Position Points Best Finish Notes
2000 20th 17 4th Fourth placed as a wild card in Vojens
2001 11th 52 3rd First year as a permanent GP rider
2002 12th 73 Winner Won in Poland - only final in the season
2003 1st 152 Winner Won in Cardiff - Nicki cites this his greatest meeting. 2003 World Champion.
2004 5th 113 4th Only reached 1 final in the season
2005 4th 102 2nd
2006 3rd 134 Winner (twice) Won first and last races in the season (Slovenia, Poland)
2007 1st 196 Winner (four times) Won in Italy, Poland, Czech Republic and Slovenia. Runner-up in Denmark and Latvia. 2007 World Champion
  permanent speedway rider
  wild card, track reserve or qualified reserve
  rider notclassify (track reserve who not started)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Oakes, P.(2006). Speedway Star Almanac. ISBN 0-9552376-1-0
  2. ^ Bamford, R.(2007). Speedway Yearbook 2007. ISBN 978-07524-4250-1
  3. ^ Nicki Pedersen Profile. NickiPedersen.com (2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
  4. ^ Eagles confident of survival - but without Pedersen. The Argus (2008-11-15). Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
  5. ^ Snub's still a pain for Ped. Daily Mirror (2008-10-23). Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
  6. ^ Nicki Pedersen wins Slovenian GP and secures second world title.. WorldSpeedway.com (2007-9-23). Retrieved on 2008-05-02.

[edit] External links

2008 Speedway Grand Prix riders
(1) Flag of Denmark N. Pedersen (2) Flag of Australia Adams (3) Flag of Australia Crump (4) Flag of Poland Gollob (5) Flag of Denmark Andersen
(6) Flag of the United States Hancock (7) Flag of Poland Holta (8) Flag of the United Kingdom Nicholls (9) Flag of the United Kingdom Harris (10) Flag of Sweden Jonsson
(11) Flag of Denmark B. Pedersen (12) Flag of Denmark Iversen (13) Flag of the Czech Republic L. Dryml (14) Flag of Poland K. Kasprzak (15) Flag of Sweden Lindgren
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