The logistics of getting to Togliatti, three hours even
from Moscow and on roughly the same longitude as Tehran, are difficult
but Hans Andersen, Sebastian Ulamek, and Tai Woffinden (riding in the
same meeting as Lindgren on Friday) had all worked out a way to fulfil
their Elite League commitments and get to the track in good time
for the championship meeting. It appeared Lindgren had too, but a change
of heart left Wolves travelling to Coventry with a National League
rider at number one. As it happens, the Bees made hard work of seeing
off their opponents, but the end result remained the same - no points
for Wolves when they're chasing play-off glory.
In the meeting itself - which wasn't the best in terms of
on-track entertainment, but still a good spectacle in front of a noisy,
capacity crowd - Lindgren started well but faded, failing to make the
semi-finals, and looking for all the world like he'd wasted his time
going there early. I'm sure Wolves' fans allowed themselves a wry smile
on top of the joy they must have felt at Woffinden - hurried travel
arrangements and all - making the final.
So why did Lindgren choose to let down his team and their
fans? The answer is simple: money. The revamped European Championship
is backed by Polish marketing firm OneSport, who are looking to carve
themselves a slice of the pie that BSI have been noisily consuming for
the past fifteen years. Lindgren is struggling in the Grands Prix and is
unlikely to regain entry to the series for 2014 unless the organisers
take pity of him as the token Swede in the series. Therefore, it's in
Lindgren's best interests to keep OneSport happy because a seeding into
the SEC for 2014 is his best chance of making some money next year.
Where does that leave the Elite League? As usual, second
best. There have been rumours for a while that Lindgren was looking at
2013 to be his last season in the UK, possibly sniffing the way the wind
is blowing, at least for top riders, in world speedway. With the FIM
reported to be looking at ways at restricting the number of leagues each
rider can compete in, Sweden and Poland would seem to be the
logical choices for a Swedish rider, with the UK - despite the earning
potential from upwards of 30 meetings at decent rates - a distant third.
That's fine as long as Sweden and Poland remain the cash cows they have
been recently, and nobody can begrudge a rider a good living.
What is most concerning, however, is that Lindgren was
only able to ride in Saturday's meeting with SVEMO (Sweden's governing
body) permission. This should have been withdrawn once he opted out of
the EL match at Coventry but wasn't. SVEMO (and the PZM and DMU) have
agreements in place with the ACU that contractual commitments be
honoured wherever possible, in accordance with the FIM calendar
introduced this season. With the DMU allowing Hans Andersen to ride for
his Danish club instead of Swindon - against that agreement - earlier
this season, it's clear that the FIM calendar is being taken more
seriously by some nations than others. The question, then, is what to do
about it...
The ACU (or, more realistically, the BSPA) could
begin to refuse to allow SVEMO- or DMU-licensed riders to compete in
their competitions, for the very good reason that these organisations are
not adhering to mutual agreements signed by all parties. Given that,
top riders apart, the majority of the Swedes and Danes riding abroad do
so in the UK, and that most of them would be unable to make a living
from the sport without Elite and Premier League bookings, the impetus on
those riders would be to lobby their federations to honour the
agreement or switch to a neutral license, depriving the federations of
much-needed license fees.
It's early days, and the landscape for 2014 in the UK
still looks very much unsettled, and it may be that the attitude of the
top riders is beginning to suit the aims of a league system that could
very well do without them. Freddie Lindgren and Hans Andersen may very
well, through their selfishness, cost some of their peers a comfortable
ride for decent rates, in favour of chasing new money all over eastern
Europe. You reap what you sow, they say - I only hope that's true in
this case.
ITEM: The National League Fours is one of the
third tier's Big Days Out. All eight teams will be represented, and a
good crowd can be expected to be in attendance at Stoke's Loomer Road
stadium. Missing from the event, however, will be two of the league's
top stars - Joe Jacobs and Stefan Nielsen - and all because of a humdrum
league meeting in Glasgow the same day.
The Premier League, for a second division, enjoys a
position over the other leagues it doesn't really deserve. Riders are
said to double-up with Elite and Premier teams, with the emphasis placed
squarely on the "up", although that's a turn of phrase that doesn't
really mean what the PL claims it to be. PL teams have first call on
riders doubling-up, even if those riders are assets of the EL team they
also ride for - the logic, one presumes, being that they are by and
large heat leaders for their lower division clubs and therefore more
difficult to replace than in the positions they occupy for their EL
teams.
This is a logic not followed through for those
riders doubling-up between the Premier and National Leagues, where -
once again - the PL gets first call on their services. I'd argue that
this, more than the EL/PL relationship, makes sense. Riders improve by
racing against better opponents, and those NL riders also riding in the
PL will benefit from the increased competition. But shouldn't that also
be the case for PL riders doubling-up in the EL? The Premier League, it
seems, is having its cake and eating it.
Mildenhall will cover for Nielsen on Sunday, although as
their number one rider he will be missed, but Coventry look to be an
outside bet already, with Rob Branford dislocating an elbow riding in,
yes, the Premier League, and also missing the big day. This will leave
Coventry tracking a quartet ranking 3rd-6th in their averages, instead
of the top four the competition is meant for. If the league system stays
anywhere near the same next season, the hierarchy of priority needs to
seriously looked at, with a top down approach overruled by all shared
events. To leave it as it is rewards mediocrity and will do nothing to
help our sport find the forward momentum it so badly needs.
ITEM: Okay, if you've been reading the last few
blogs you'll know that I've been suggesting new rules that could be
adopted for the 2014 season. I do this with no expectation that they
will be, or even that those with the power to do so will even be aware
of what I'm writing (although I suspect that not to be the case!)
but rather because I - as a paying fan - can see some things that are
wrong with the sport, and how they might be put right. You never know -
if the wind of change is blowing in the right direction we might get
some common sense in our sport one day!
* Sort out the racesuits
On the surface of it, racesuits are a
good idea. Having all the members of your team look more or less
identical is good for the image of the sport - how would it look if
Manchester United took to the field, each player with different coloured
shorts and a slightly different shade of red to the shirts? - but it
only works if all the members of the team look more or less
identical. With teams chopping and changing riders, and with guest
riders an inevitability in our sport, quite often teams are taking to
the track with a mixture of team kevlars, race jackets, or those
horrible raceshirts (or even, in the case of Birmingham on Sky last
week, an oversized football shirt!). There are two obvious solutions: 1)
if we are to continue with team racesuits each team must provide spares
for guests and new signings to wear until they have a racesuit of their
own. Speedway riders don't come in too many varieties of body size, so
this shouldn't be too difficult. 2) use race jackets, like the old days
(and as still used in the PL and NL), and if Sky insist on black legs,
then mandate that all riders' individual kevlars have to include black
legs. Or we could carry on looking a bit of a mess?
* Put a time limit on meetings
One of the biggest complaints from
fans is that meetings take too long to run. Sometimes meetings run long
because of incidents - burst airfences, injured riders, etc - but often
they just run long. Perhaps the referee is too officious with restarts
or not quick enough on the two-minute warning, or perhaps the interval
drags on. Whatever the reason, except in very exceptional circumstances,
this is unacceptable. In most forms of entertainment, you know when it
will start and pretty much when it will finish. If speedway is to
attract the casual punters' pounds (and keep its own fans happy), it
needs to sharpen up on the timing. The referee is key to this, with the
two-minute warning the best weapon in moving a meeting along. Not
allowing riders back into the pits after a quarter of a lap is also a
good tactic, but whatever the weapon used, it needs to be deployed.
Cricket has a minimum number of overs per hour that have to be bowled,
and teams can be fined for not keeping up with it - I'd suggest a
similar tactic in speedway might prove very effective with cash-strapped
promoters. Fifteen heats should take no more than ninety minutes to run
- with a 15-minute interval, a 7.45 tapes up results in a 9.30 finish,
leaving ample time for a second-half, a drink in the bar, or an early
getaway, depending on the whims of the fans.
ITEM: I have no interest in becoming friends with
speedway riders. I don't particularly want to work for any speedway
promoter, paid or unpaid, and no real desire to lead any kind of fans'
movement. Watching speedway is my hobby, and I find that if I get
involved in my hobbies I end up ruining them for myself and others
because I can't get my own way. That's not to say I wouldn't accept the
same sort of deal offered to John Berry in the 1980s, to oversee the
entire sport with no interference from the promoters, but that's more to
do with my megalomaniacal tendencies than any desire to work in
speedway.
I write this blog for my own amusement and because if I
didn't I'd explode through frustration at the tiny things that annoy me
about our sport. I also do it because I like to talk about speedway, but
rarely is it motivated by any kind of selfish urge to push through my
own agenda. Rarely. I have one weakness, of course - Poole
Pirates. Or rather three or four individuals associated with that club. I
begin to lose all rationality when it comes to Poole, a surely
understandable reaction to Matt Fords attempted murder of my club in the
winter of 2010/11, and especially when it comes to a rider who should
have used up all his second chances a long time ago.
I'm not alone in this - across the Elite League fans are
sick of the Pirates and their shenanigans, and if you were charitable
you could say they are pantomime villains, the team everybody loves to
beat, and that having them in that role is healthy for the league and
the greater narrative of a season. However, you can go too far down that
road and there is no coming back. Instead of being the team everybody
likes to beat, they become the team nobody wants to see, despite the
star attractions of their top riders. Let me dip into a wrestling
analogy for a moment, if you'll allow me that indulgence...
In wrestling there are heroes (babyfaces) and villains
(heels). The job of both is to get "over" - for a babyface that means
having the crowd behind you as you mount your inevitable comeback
against the dastardly heel, and for the heel it means having the crowd
boo your every move, worried for the safety of their beloved babyface.
The animosity the heel generates is called "heat" but there is also such
a thing as "fuck you heat". This is where the heel has
misplayed his role to such an extent that the crowd genuinely hate him.
They don't want to see the babyface beat him because they don't want to
see him at all. He is bad for business and won't last long unless he enjoys some special protection by the promoter.
I can't speak for everyone but to me - and certainly a very vocal minority of Bees' fans - Poole have slipped into fuck you
heat territory. We don't want to see them any more than we have to,
which is obviously troublesome given Nigel Pearson's "editorial
judgement" of focusing on "winners" to the detriment of everything
else, but at least if you only draw them once at the start of the season
you can expect to get that over with and not see them again at your
home track, right? Well, no, as it happens, because - as part of the
loan deal that sees Greg Hancock become one of them - Mick Horton
has instigated an annual challenge match against the Pirates, not quite
understanding his core audience, it seems.
And this is where I wish I could use this blog for
my own selfish ends, wield any power I might have to stop this
happening. As it is, my power is restricted to not going on the night,
even though the meeting is included in my season ticket and so I can't
even deprive Mick Horton of any cash as some kind of feeble punishment. I
love my club, and if it's a fair evening and the mercenary Hancock
deigns to appear, they should get a good crowd and some much-needed
cash. But, not for the first time in life as a sports fan, I just wish
that principles could overcome cash. I won't give up wishing but every
blow is another step towards not caring any more, like so many before
me. And that would be a very bad thing.
I agree with your comment re: Poole. How they can chop and change a team to suit their will I will never understand. I hope that Karma exists and that either Lakeside else Peterborough oust them from the top 4 this season.
ReplyDeleteI also believe it is time to curb the number of foreign riders in this country. Too many so-called top class riders are detrimental to this sport, though I know that they have been around for ever.
The early days of the revived West Ham (circa 1964) saw a team that struggled but the following year with the majority of the team being British (Sverre Harrfeldt excepted) they swept all before them and young Simmons's career took off from that point though I appreciate not with West Ham.
Sadly European law dictates to a great deal and we have to cow-tail to that larger authority with regard to workplace law.