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List of national sidecarcross champions
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This is a List of national sidecarcross champions, including the national championships of Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Great Britain, Latvia, the Netherlands, Lithuania Sweden and Switzerland. Of those competitions listed, the Belgian Championship is the oldest one, dating back to 1951, followed by the French, formed in 1956.
Bold denotes, the team also won the Sidecarcross World Championship or one of its predecessor competitions, the FIM-Cup or FIM European Championship, in that season.
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Belgium
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The champions of the Belgian national championship, organised by the Fédération Motocycliste de Belgique:[1]
The riders (passengers not included) with multiple championship wins, the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP BELGIUM". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
Source:"List of Belgium champions". sidecarcross.be. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
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Denmark
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The champions of the Danish championship, organised by the Danmarks Motor Union:[2][3]
The riders (passengers not included) with multiple championship wins, the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS DENMARK". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 16 November 2009.
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Estonia
The champions of the Estonian championship, organised by the Eesti Mootorrattaspordi Föderatsioon:[4]
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS ESTONIA". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
France
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The champions of the French championship, organised by the Fédération Française de Motocyclisme:[5]
The most successful riders (passengers not included), the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS FRANCE". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
- 1 Also used Marco Godau as his passenger.
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Germany
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A German national championship has been organised from 1974 onwards by the Deutscher Motor Sport Bund.[6] Before that, from 1970, the OMSK-Pokal was considered to be an unofficial national championship and still continues to be organised, now under the name of DMSB-Pokal.[7]
OMSK-Pokal
National championship
Organised since 1974 the German national championship was converted to an international one in 2007, allowing non-German riders to win it from then on:[8][9]
The most successful riders (passengers not included), the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
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Great Britain
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The champions of the British championship, organised by the Auto-Cycle Union:[10][11]
The most successful riders (passengers not included), the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"BRITISH CHAMPIONSHIP WINNERS". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
- 1 Also used Dave Beavis as a passenger.
- 2 Also used Barry Williams as a passenger.
- 3 Also used Andreas Hüsser as a passenger.
- 4 Also used Barry Williams & John Mitchelson as a passenger.
- 5 Also used Barry Williams as a passenger.
- 6 Also used Shane Skeats & Garry Withers as a passenger.
- 7 Also used Garry Withers as a passenger.
- 8 Also used David Keane as a passenger.
- 9 Also used Jason Peters as a passenger.
- 10 Also used Luke Peters as a passenger.
- 11 Also used Marc Cooper as a passenger.
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Latvia
The champions of the Latvian championship, organised by the Latvijas Motosporta Federācija:[12]
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS LATVIA". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
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Netherlands
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The champions of the Netherlands sidecarcross championship, organised by the Koninklijke Nederlandse Motorrijders Vereniging:[13]
The most successful riders (passengers not included), the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HOLLAND". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
- 1 Also used Bart Notten as his passenger.
- 2 Also used Henk Mensinck as his passenger.
- 3 Also used J. van Vliet and D. Grootendorst as his passenger.
- 4 Also used Frans Geurts van Kessel as his passenger.
- 5 Also used Ron Varga as his passenger.
- 6 Also used Reto Grütter as his passenger.
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Sweden
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The champions of the Swedish championship, organised by the Svenska Motorcykel- och Snöskoterförbundet:[14][15]
The most successful riders (passengers not included), the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"SM Mästare (Swedish champions)". sidvagnscross.se. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP SWEDEN". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 20 August 2008.
- 1 Also used Colin Dunkley as his passenger.
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Switzerland
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Two national sidecarcross championships exist in Switzerland, the championship of the SAM, the Schweizerischer Auto- und Motoradfahrer Verband,[16] an amateur association, and the championship of the FMS, the FIM affiliated Fédération Motocycliste Suisse:[17] Since 2002, the championship of the FMS has only been held once, in 2009.[18]
FMS
The most successful riders (passengers not included), the number of championships they have won and in what era (first to last title):
Source:"SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP SWITZERLAND". The John Davy Pages. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
SAM
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See also
References
External links
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