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2011 Individual Ice Racing World Championship

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The 2011 FIM Individual Ice Racing World Championship will be the 2011 version of FIM Individual Ice Racing World Championship season. The world champion will be determined in eight finals hosted in four cities between 5 February and 27 March 2011.[1][2]

Qualification

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In three Qualifying Rounds will started 48 riders from 13 nationan federation and to Final series will qualify top 5 from each meetings and 6th placed riders from QR1 and QR2.

Qualifying Rounds Tschechische Republik Vereinigtes Königreich Deutschland Schweiz Frankreich Ukraine Niederlande Russland Norwegen Österreich Polen Finnland Schweden
QR1 Österreich Sankt Johann 2 2 1 1 3 1 3 1 2
QR2 Polen Sanok 1 1 1 2 3 1 3 2 2
QR3 Österreich Saalfelden 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 2 2

Riders

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There will be eighteen permanent riders. Seventeen riders was qualify from the qualifying rounds, and one permanent Wild Card will be nominatedand soon. There are no Wild Card and additional Track Reserve riders.

In all cases of absence of a scheduled rider, the draw number 17 track reserve rider shall be elevated for that meeting to take the place of that missing scheduled rider. In the case that there are 2 missing scheduled riders, then both track reserve riders (draw numbers 17 and 18) are elevated.

If a track reserve rider is promoted to the status of a scheduled rider and circumstances permit, a replacement track reserve rider shall be selected from the Substitute list based on their ranking for that year. The CCP Executive Secretariat will release the Substitute list along with the ballot for the first Final event.

A starting position draw for each final meeting will be balloted by the FIM.

Track reserves

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After each Final, the 2 track reserve riders will become scheduled riders in the next Final, even if they have taken part in the Final where they are track reserve riders. Therefore, the 2 lowest point score riders (not being the 2 track reserve riders from that Final) on the Intermediate Classification will become track reserve in the next Final. The best placed rider will be the 1st track reserve rider with draw number 17 and the 2nd rider will be the 2nd track reserve with draw number 18.

Qualified riders

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Top six riders from QR1 in Sankt Johann, Austria:

  1. Russland Sergey Karachintsev
  2. Österreich Franz Zorn
  3. Russland Ivan Ivanov
  4. Russland Dmitri Bulankin
  5. Deutschland Stefan Pletschacher
  6. Finnland Mats JarfTR

Top six riders from QR2 in Sanok, Poland:

  1. Russland Nikolay Krasnikov
  2. Russland Daniil Ivanov
  3. Schweden Stefan Svensson
  4. Russland Igor Kononov
  5. Polen Grzegorz Knapp
  6. Tschechische Republik Antonín Klatovský, Jr.TR

Top five riders from QR3 in Saalfelden, Austria:a

  1. Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich
  2. Russland Vitaly Khomitsevich
  3. Österreich Harald Simon
  4. Deutschland Günther Bauer
  5. Schweden Peter Koij

One rider nominated by FIM:

  1. Niederlande Johnny Tuinstra[3]
Notes:
TR. Jarf and Klatovský were qualify to the Final One (Day One) as a track reserve riders
a. QR3 hosted in Austria was co-organized by the Dutch federation

Qualified substitute

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  1. Niederlande René Stellingwerf
  2. Tschechische Republik Jan Klatovský

Final Series

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# Date Venue Winners Runner-up 3rd place
1 February 5 Russland Krasnogorsk Russland Nikolay Krasnikov Russland Igor Kononov Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich
2 February 6 Russland Krasnogorsk Russland Nikolay Krasnikov Russland Igor Kononov Russland Daniil Ivanov
3 February 12 Russland Tolyatti Russland Daniil Ivanov Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich Russland Nikolay Krasnikov
4 February 13 Russland Tolyatti Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich Russland Nikolay Krasnikov Russland Igor Kononov
5 March 12 Niederlande Assen Russland Igor Kononov Russland Nikolay Krasnikov Russland Daniil Ivanov
6 March 13 Niederlande Assen Russland Daniil Ivanov Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich Russland Nikolay Krasnikov
7 March 26 Deutschland Inzell Russland Nikolay Krasnikov Russland Igor Kononov Russland Daniil Ivanov
8 March 27 Deutschland Inzell Russland Nikolay Krasnikov Russland Igor Kononov Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich

Classification

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The World Champion will be the rider having collected the most points at the end of the Championship. The track reserve riders are taken into account on the Final Overall Classification.

In case of one or more ties on the Intermediate Classification of the Championship, the following will apply:

  1. Best place in the last Final run.

In case of riders involved in a tie on the Final Overall Classification at the end of the Championship, the following will apply:

  1. Run-off for 1st, 2nd and 3rd place.
  2. Best place in the last Final meeting.
Pos. Rider Points Russland Russland Russland Russland Niederlande Niederlande Deutschland Deutschland
1 Russland Nikolay Krasnikov 176 25 25 18 20 20 18 25 25
2 Russland Igor Kononov 153 20 20 16 18 25 14 20 20
3 Russland Daniil Ivanov 152 16 18 25 16 18 25 18 16
4 Russland Dmitry Khomitsevich 145 18 14 20 25 16 20 14 18
5 Russland Vitaly Khomitsevich 108 14 16 11 14 11 16 12 14
6 Russland Dmitry Bulankin 97 13 12 14 11 14 10 10 13
7 Russland Sergey Karachintsev 89 10 11 13 13 5 11 16 10
8 Russland Ivan Ivanov 85 12 13 12 9 12 12 7 8
9 Schweden Stefan Svensson 68 9 10 10 10 9 7 6 7
10 Österreich Franz Zorn 73 7 6 8 7 7 13 13 12
11 Österreich Harald Simon 72 8 7 7 6 13 9 11 11
12 Deutschland Günther Bauer 64 11 8 3 8 8 8 9 9
13 Tschechische Republik Antonín Klatovský 49 ns 9 9 12 6 4 8 1
14 Polen Grzegorz Knapp 35 4 4 6 0 10 6 4 1
15 Schweden Peter Koij 26 6 5 5 3 4 ns 3 0
16 Deutschland Stefan Pletschacher 20 5 3 ns 5 ns 3 1 3
17 Finnland Mats Järf 9 0 0 ns 4 ns 5 - -
18 Niederlande Johnny Tuinstra 7 3 ns 4 ns - - - -
19 Deutschland Max Neidermaier 7 - - - - - - 4 3
20 Tschechische Republik Jan Klatovský 5 - - - - - - 0 5
21 Niederlande René Stellingwerf 3 - - - - 3 ns - -

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "2010 FIM Conference Meeting" (PDF). FIM-live.com. 2010-03-05. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-06. Retrieved 2010-03-10.
  2. ^ "Terminarze Mistrzostw Świata 2011" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 2010-10-25. Archived from the original on 28 October 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-26.
  3. ^ "FIM przyznała dziką kartę" (in Polish). SportoweFakty.pl. 26 Jan 2011. Retrieved 26 Jan 2011.