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Simon Cross

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Simon Cross
Born (1965-05-31) 31 May 1965 (age 59)
Hereford, England
NationalityBritish (English)
Career history
Great Britain
1982Oxford Cheetahs
1983Weymouth Wildcats
1982-1995Cradley Heathens
1991Middlesbrough Bears
1996Coventry Bees
Sweden
1995-1996Smederna
Individual honours
1988Overseas Champion
1986 1994British Masters grasstrack Champion
1987British 350 grasstrack Champion
1986European Grasstrack Champion
1987WA State Champion
Team honours
1989World Team Cup
1983British League Champion
1983, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989British League KO Cup winner
1983National League Pairs Champion
1995Premier League Four-Team Championship
1983, 1984, 1987Midland Cup champion
1984, 1986League Cup champion

Simon James Cross (born 31 May 1965 in Hereford, England) is a former motorcycle speedway rider who spent most of his career with the Cradley Heathens.[1]

Career

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Cross began his British leagues speedway career riding for the Oxford Cheetahs during the 1982 National League season.[1] The following season, as a Weymouth Wildcats rider, he won the National League Pairs Championship with Martin Yeates.[2]

In early 1987, Cross was part of a touring troupe to Australia, which included (among others) World Champion Hans Nielsen, Tommy Knudsen, Shawn Moran and Rick Miller. While in Australia he won the 1986/87 Western Australian State Championship at the Claremont Speedway in Perth. Also in 1987, Cross qualified for his first and only World Final in the 1987 Individual Speedway World Championship, run over two days at the Olympic Stadium in Amsterdam. He finished in 10th place with 10 points scored (7 on day one, 3 on day two).

In 1988, Cross continued to ride for Cradley Heath[3] and later in the season, Cross and Kelvin Tatum finished runner-up in Speedway World Pairs Championship.[4]

The following year in 1989, he represented England, when they won the 1989 Speedway World Team Cup final at the Odsal Stadium in Bradford. Cross was involved in the infamous terrible crash on turn 1 of the first heat of the meeting which not only took all four riders out of the meeting, but ended the career of his Cradley teammate and three time World Champion Erik Gundersen. The Dane led out of the gate, but as Gundersen broadsided into the first turn Jimmy Nilsen and Lance King were battling one another for position and Gundersen was clipped from behind by them causing him to highside and all four riders (Gundersen, Cross, Nilsen and King to crash). Nilsen and King were thrown towards the outside of the track and Cross, in attempting to negotiate through the melee hit Gundersen and was himself struck in the face by a wayward bike. Gundersen suffered head and spinal injuries. None of the riders took any further part in the meeting with King having a neck injury, Nilsen hip and thigh injuries and Cross a badly cut face. All four were taken to Hospital. Great Britain took the gold medal that day and were World Champions but the meeting had been overshadowed.

In 1990, he finished runner-up in the British Speedway Championship.[5]

In 1995, he was part of the Cradley Heathens four that won the Premier League Four-Team Championship, which was held on 6 August 1995, at the East of England Arena.[6]

At retirement he had earned 33 international caps for the England national team.[1]

World Final Appearances

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Individual World Championship

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World Pairs Championship

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World Team Cup

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World Longtrack Championship

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Finalist

Grand-Prix Overall

  • 1998 8th (45pts)

European Grasstrack Championship

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Finalist

References

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  1. ^ a b c "ULTIMATE RIDER INDEX, 1929-2022" (PDF). British Speedway. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  2. ^ "1983 season results" (PDF). Speedway Researcher. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  3. ^ "Cradley swoop to sign Dane". Sandwell Evening Mail. 9 February 1988. Retrieved 29 August 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ Bamford, R. & Shailes, G. (2002). A History of the World Speedway Championship. Stroud: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-2402-5
  5. ^ 2007 British Final Match Programme
  6. ^ "Speedway". Birmingham Daily Post. 7 August 1995. Retrieved 5 July 2023 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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