2006 Sidecarcross World Championship






































2006 Sidecarcross World Championship

Season

Grands Prix
8

Start date
23 April

End date
24 September

Drivers

Champions

Netherlands Daniël Willemsen

Belgium Sven Verbrugge



Sidecarcross des Nations

Netherlands Netherlands

Chronology

Previous season

Next season

2005

2007

The 2006 FIM Sidecarcross world championship, the 27th edition of the competition, started on 23 April and finished after eight race weekends on 17 September 2006 with Daniël Willemsen taking out the title once more.




Contents






  • 1 Overview


  • 2 Format


  • 3 Retirements


  • 4 Calendar


  • 5 Classification


    • 5.1 Riders




  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





Overview




Daniël Willemsen and Sven Verbrugge in the 2006 season


The 2006 season was the 27th edition of the sidecarcross world championship. It resulted in a fifth world championship for Daniël Willemsen, his fourth in a row and the second with his passenger Sven Verbrugge from Belgium. The two clearly dominated the season with 13 wins in the 16 races and an 83-point gap to the second placed Evgeny Scherbinin / Sergei Sosnovskikh from Russia. A close third came Marco Happich / Meinrad Schelbert, the German-Swiss combination.


After ten seasons in the top ten and five world championships, it was the first time since 1995 for last seasons runner-up Kristers Serģis not to finish in the top ten. Due to injury, the Latvian only took part in four races but still archived three podium finishes.


The eight races of the season were held in six countries, France, Germany, Croatia, Belgium, Latvia and the Netherlands.



Format


Every Grand Prix weekend is split into two races, both held on the same day. This means, the 2006 season with its eight Grand Prix had sixteen races. Each race is currently 30 minutes plus 2 rounds long.


Teams go through a qualifying, usually on Saturday. Typically, around 50 teams compete for 30 spots on the starting grid, meaning around 20 teams miss out on the race altogether. Some teams did not actually get a race start all season, failing in qualifying each time.


The first twenty teams of each race scored competition points, allocated accordingly to the following system:



















































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 2006 season a number of long-term competitors retired from the World Championship, the longest standing of those being German Josef Brustmann with 19 seasons in the competition and Belgian Geert Devoldere with 18 seasons, both first having raced in the World Championship in 1988.[1][2][3]



Calendar


The 2006 season had sixteen races:[4]







































































Date

Place

Race winners

GP winner
23 April

Netherlands Oss

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
21 May

Croatia Zabok

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
4 June

France Brou

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
18 June

Latvia Ķegums

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
2 July

Belgium Neeroeteren

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
20 August

Germany Teutschenthal

Latvia Māris Rupeiks / Haralds Kurpnieks

Latvia Māris Rupeiks / Haralds Kurpnieks

Germany Josef Brustmann / Stefan Urich
13 September

France Saint-Jean-d'Angle

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
17 September

Germany Rudersberg

Germany Marco Happich / United Kingdom Mark Watson

Sweden Henrik Soderqvist / United Kingdom Collin Dunkley

Netherlands Daniel Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge
24 September

Latvia Ķegums

Netherlands Netherlands


  • The Sidecarcross des Nations in Ķegums on 24 September 2006 is a non-championship event but part of the calendar and is denoted by a light blue background in the table above.


  • Passengers in italics.



Classification



Riders


The final standings in the overall table of the 2006 season were:[5]















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Position

Driver / Passenger

Equipment

Points

Wins

Second

Third

1

Netherlands Daniël Willemsen / Belgium Sven Verbrugge

Zabel-VMC
341
13



2

Russia Evgeny Scherbinin / Sergei Sosnovskikh

MTH-APZ
258

5
3

3

Germany Marko Happich / Switzerland Meinrad Schelbert *
Zabel-VMC
243
1
1
2

4

Latvia Māris Rupeiks / Haralds Kurpnieks

KTM-AYR
231
1
4
2

5

Belgium Jan Hendrickx / Tim Smeuninx
Zabel-VMC
217


1

6

Switzerland Andy Burgler / Martin Betschart
KTM-VMC
211

2
2

7

Belgium Joris Hendrickx / Eli Piccart
KTM-AYR
180


1

8

United Kingdom Stuart Brown / Luke Peters
Zabel-VMC
165


1

9

Czech Republic Vaclav Rozehnal / Marek Rozehnal
Zabel-VMC
157


1

10

Netherlands Marcel Willemsen / Bjorn Roes
Zabel-VMC
137




11

Germany Josef Brustmann / Stefan Urich
KTM-NPH
117
1



12

Latvia Jānis Daiders / Lauris Daiders
Zabel-VMC
115




13

Belgium Nicky Pulinx / Ludo Somers
KTM-AYR
113




14

Netherlands Jarno van den Boomen / Henry van de Wiel
MTH-VMC
100

1
1

15

Netherlands Carlo van Duijnhoven / Christian Verhagen
MTH-VMC
100




16

Switzerland Ueli Müller / Reto Grütter
Zabel-MTH
100




17

Netherlands Eric Schrijver / Ramon van Mil
MTH-VMC
93




18

Czech Republic Tomas Cermak / Ondrej Cermak
JAWA-VMC
68




19

Latvia Kristers Serģis / Kaspars Stupelis
KTM-Mefo
64

2
1

20

United Kingdom John Watson / Mark Watson
Zabel-VMC
57




21

Austria Bertram Martin / Switzerland Bruno Kaelin
Zabel-VMC
57




22

Germany Martin Walter / Andre Saam
Zabel-VMC
54




23

Sweden Henrik Söderqvist / United Kingdom Collin Dunkley

Husaberg-VMC
52

1
1

24

United Kingdom Scott Wilkinson / Gary Burt
Zabel-VMC
52




25

Belgium Kristof Santermans / Netherlands Patrick Nieuwenhuizen

Yamaha-VMC
47




26

United Kingdom John Lyne / Michael Turner
Zabel-VMC
26




27

France Laurent Devoldre / Sebastian Devoldre
Husaberg-VMC
20




28

Netherlands Thijs Derks / Roy Derks
Husaberg-BSU
17




29

France Michael Poirier / Bertrand Poirier
KTM-VMC
14




30

Belgium Geert Devoldere / France Guennady Auvray

Honda-EML
13




31

Germany Werner Wittmann / Mario Wohlfart
Zabel-AYR
10




32

Belgium Andreas Clohse / Guido Schlabertz
Zabel-VMC
10




33

Netherlands Marcel Grondman / Martijn Geerdink
Zabel-VMC
9




34

Switzerland Roland Sutter / Sandro Michelleto
KTM-VMC
9




35

Sweden Patrick Fagerberg / Daniel Fagerberg
KTM-AYR
9




36

Netherlands Wim Janssen / Henk Roenhorst
Zabel-VMC
8




37

Netherlands Maikel Kuster / Wilfried Keuben
Zabel-VMC
8




38

Netherlands Johan Smit / Bart Notten
Husaberg-BSU
7




39

Netherlands Patrick Greup / Marc van Deutekom
KTM-VMC
7




40

Lithuania Imantas Tamuliūnas / Egidijus Karaliūnas
KTM-AYR
6




41

Germany Jens Bochmann / Stefan Progscha
Zabel-AYR
6




42

France Jean Marie Ains / Bernard Jayet
Zabel-VMC
5




43

France Baptiste Bigand / Julien Bigand
MTH-BSU
5




44

Estonia Andrus Vaks / Raimo Kaul
KTM-AYR
4




45

Belgium Boudewijn Gommeren / Steve van Tongerlo
KTM-AYR
4




46

United Kingdom David Keane / Andy Heighes
MTH-VMC
3




47

France David Surcin / Landry Tessier
Zabel-VMC
3




48

Latvia Otomārs Skreija / Gastons Skreija
MTH-BSU
2




49

France Herve Boursaud / Edouard Chereau
KTM-VMC
1




50

France Guillaume Martin / Jacques Pilleir
Zabel-VMC
1





  • Equipment listed is motor and frame.

  • Marko Happichs only win of the season came with Mark Watson as passenger, who raced at the German GP with him.



References





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


  2. ^ JOSEF BRUSTMANN GP RECORD The John Davey Pages, accessed: 9 November 2014


  3. ^ GEERT DEVOLDERE GP RECORD The John Davey Pages, accessed: 9 November 2014


  4. ^ FIM Sidecarcross World Championship – 2006 Calendar FIM website, accessed: 5 August 2011


  5. ^ FIM SIDECAR MOTOCROSS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP: Classification 2006 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









Popular posts from this blog

Florida Star v. B. J. F.

Danny Elfman

Retrieve a Users Dashboard in Tumblr with R and TumblR. Oauth Issues