Ice Speedway of Nations | |
---|---|
Venue | Shadrinsk, Russia |
Start date | 10 February 2018 |
End date | 11 February 2018 |
Nations | 6 |
The 2018 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 40th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 10 and 11 February 2018, in Shadrinsk, Russia. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Pos | Riders | Pts |
---|---|---|
1 | Dmitry Khomitsevich 20, Daniil Ivanov 17, Dmitry Koltakov 13 | 50 |
2 | Niclas Svensson 18, Ove Ledström 14, Martin Haarahiltunen 8 | 40 |
3 | Franz Zorn 19, Charly Ebner Jr 11, Harald Simon DNR | 30 |
4 | Hans Weber 7, Max Niedermaier 5, Gunther Bauer 11 | 23 |
5 | Radek Hutla 0, Luaks Hutla 18, Vladimir Visvader 2 | 20 |
6 | Matti Isoaho 14, Jussi Nyronen 0, Rami Systa 3 | 17 |
The 2010 FIM Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 32nd edition and the 2010 version of FIM Team Ice Racing World Championship season. The Final was held in Krasnogorsk, Moscow Oblast, Russia on 30–31 January 2010.
The 2001 Individual Ice Speedway World Championship was the 36th edition of the World Championship The Championship was held as a Grand Prix series over eight rounds.
The 2004 Individual Ice Speedway World Championship was the 39th edition of the World Championship The Championship was held as a Grand Prix series over eight rounds. The title was won by Dmitry Bulankin
The 1998 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 20th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on ?, 1998, in Gothenburg, in Sweden.
The 1999 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 21st edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on ?, 1999, in Berlin, in Germany.
The 2001 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 23rd edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on ?, 2001, in Berlin, Germany.
The 2002 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 24th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on ?, 2002, in Krasnogorsk, in Russia.
The 2003 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 25th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on ?, 2003, in Saransk, in Russia.
The 2004 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 26th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held from 23 to 24 January 2004, in Inzell, in Germany.
The 2005 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 27th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held in Krasnogorsk, in Russia from 4 to 5 February 2005.
The 2006 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 28th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 18th & 19 March, 2006, in Berlin, in Germany.
The 2007 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 29th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held from2 to 3 March 2007, in Saransk, in Russia.
The 2008 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 30th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held from 15 to 16 February 2008, in Krasnogorsk, in Russia.
The 2009 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 31st edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held from 31 January to 1 February 2009, in Inzell, in Germany.
The 2013 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 35th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 25/26 January, 2013, in Sanok, in Poland.
The 2014 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 36th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 8/9 February, 2014, in Tolyatti, Russia.
The 2015 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 37th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 28 February and 1 March 2015, in Berlin, Germany.
The 2016 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 38th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 13/14 February, 2016, in Tolyatti, Russia.
The 2017 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 39th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on 11/12 March, 2017, in Inzell, Germany.
The FIM Ice Speedway of Nations, formerly known as the Ice Speedway Team World Championship, is an international ice speedway competition, first held in Kalinin (Tver), USSR, in 1979. Since its establishment, the tournament has been noted by a continued Russian dominance: the Soviet Union, Commonwealth of Independent States and Russia have won all but three tournaments. The only non-Russian teams to have won were West Germany in 1983, and Sweden - in 1985, 1995 and 2002.