Lokomotīve Daugavpils, also known as Lokomotiv Daugavpils, is a Latvian motorcycle speedway team based in Daugavpils who race in the Polish Speedway Second League (2. Liga).[1][2]
Lokomotīve Daugavpils | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Club information | |||||||
Track address | Lokomotiv Stadium Jelgavas iela 53 LV-5404 Daugavpils | ||||||
Country | Latvia | ||||||
Founded | 1964 | ||||||
Team manager | Nikolajs Kokins | ||||||
League | Polish 2. Liga | ||||||
Website | Official website | ||||||
Club facts | |||||||
Track size | 373 m | ||||||
Track record time | 66.65 | ||||||
Track record date | 2010-05-02 | ||||||
Track record holder | Grigory Laguta | ||||||
Major team honours | |||||||
|
Stadium edit
Stadium Lokomotīve (former name Spīdveja centrs) is located at Jelgavas iela 54, Daugavpils. Its capacity is 10,000 seats. The track is 373 metres long and has a granite surface. The track record was set by Grigory Laguta (66.01 sec on 30 May 2010).[3]
History edit
The club began league speedway in 1964, as part of the Soviet Union Championship. They won the silver medal in 1970 and 1971.[4] Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union the team continued to race in the Russian Team Speedway Championship, due to the lack of a team competition in Latvia.[5] They won the bronze medal four times in 1995, 1996, 2001 and 2002.[6]
The team withdrew from the Russian leagues to join the Polish leagues and twice won the 1. Liga in 2015[7] and 2016[8] but were not promoted to the Ekstraliga, which was restricted to Polish clubs.
During the 2020 Polish speedway season the club were relegated to 2. Liga.
Teams edit
2023 team edit
- Nick Morris
- Gustav Grahn
- Kevin Juhl Pedersen
- Steve Worrall
- Sam Jensen
- Justin Sedgmen
- Jevgeņijs Kostigovs
- Daniils Kolodinskis
- Časts Puodžuks
- Ričards Ansviesulis
Previous teams edit
Extended content
|
---|
2022 team |
Honours edit
Competitions | Total | Golden medals | Silver medals | Bronze medals | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Years | Total | Years | Total | Years | ||
European Club (KPE) (since 1998) |
2 | 1 | 2005 | 1 | 2001 |
Season by season record edit
Russia edit
Season | League | Rang |
---|---|---|
1995 | I | 3rd |
1996 | I | 3rd |
1997 | I | 4th |
1998 | I | 4th |
1999 | I | 4th |
2000 | I | 3rd |
2001 | I | 3rd |
2002 | I | 3rd |
2003 | I | 4th |
2004 | I | 4th |
2005 | I | 8th |
Poland edit
Season | League | Rang |
---|---|---|
2005 | 2. Liga | 3rd |
2006 | 2. Liga | 3rd |
2007 | 2. Liga | 2nd (promotion) |
2008 | 1. Liga | 5th |
2009 | 1. Liga | 2nd |
2010 | 1. Liga | 4th |
2011 | 1. Liga | 5th |
2012 | 1. Liga | 4th |
2013 | 1. Liga | 4th |
2014 | 1. Liga | 6th |
2015 | 1. Liga | winner |
2016 | 1. Liga | winner |
2017 | 1. Liga | 3rd |
2018 | 1. Liga | 4th |
2019 | 1. Liga | 6th |
2020 | 1. Liga | 8th |
2022 | 2. Liga | 4th |
2023 | 2. Liga | 5th |
2024 | National league |
Team name changes edit
- Iskra Daugavpils: 1964
- Lokomotiv Daugavpils: 1966–1993
- Daugavpils Speedway–Center: 2003–2004
- Daugavpils Speedway: 2005
- Daugavpils Speedway Center (Daugavpils Spīdveja centrs): 2006
- Lokomotiv Daugavpils (Daugavpils Lokomotīve): 2007–present
See also edit
References edit
- ^ "2. SPEEDWAY LEAGUE". Sporto we Fakty. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
- ^ "Speedway from Around the Globe - Poland PGE Ekstraliga". Speedway Star page 42. 10 September 2022.
- ^ "The Stadium". Lokomotiv Daugavpils Speedway. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
- ^ "Soviet Union Team Championship". Speedway History. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
- ^ "Soviet Union & Russian Team Championship". Speedway Fansite. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
- ^ "Russian Team Championship". Speedway History. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
- ^ "Historia Speedway Polsce 2015". Historia Speedway. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
- ^ "Historia Speedway Polsce 2016". Historia Speedway. Retrieved 8 March 2023.