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Joe Screen

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Nationality
  
England

Career status
  
Retired


Name
  
Joe Screen

British league
  
Joe Screen joescreenJPGjpg

Born
  
27 November 1972 (age 51) Chesterfield, England (
1972-11-27
)

1989-1993, 1998, 2003-20081994-199719992000-2003200920102010-20132011, 20122013 1992, 1994-199719931998-19992000200220032004 1993-199419961997-2001200220032004
  
UKBelle Vue AcesBradford DukesHull VikingsEastbourne EaglesPoole PiratesWolverhampton WolvesGlasgow Tigers (PL)Birmingham BrummiesCoventry BeesPolandWlokniarz CzestochowaUnia TarnowMarma RzeszowZKS Polonia BydgoszczStal Gorzow WielkopolskiPolonia PilaKM Ostrow WielkopolskiSwedenGetingarnaDackarnaTeam SveluxLuxo StarsValsarnaVargarna

19931990, 199319921996, 2004
  
World Under 21 ChampionBritish Under 21 ChampionBritish League Riders' ChampionBritish Champion

199219931994, 20011995, 2002, 20051997, 2000
  
Elite League Four-TeamBritish League ChampionElite League PremiershipElite League KO CupElite League Champion

Joe screen poezja u la


Joseph 'Joe' Screen (born 27 November 1972 in Chesterfield, Derbyshire), is a former British international speedway rider. His major speedway honours include winning the World Under-21 Championship in 1993, the British Championship in 1996 and 2004, and the British League Riders' Championship in 1992. Screen also competed in grasstrack and longtrack motorcycle racing and is a former British Masters champion.

Contents

Joe Screen Page3

Joe screen vs swist hamill 1995


Career

Joe Screen Inside Track Captain Mads Korneliussen39s weekly look

Screen began riding motorcycles at the age of four, and gained his early experience on a 50cc motocross bike. After competing in motocross and grasstrack he started to compete in speedway at the age of fourteen.

Joe Screen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Screen started his speedway career with the Belle Vue Aces in 1989 in the top tier of British League racing. In 1994 he transferred to the Bradford Dukes, where he spent the next four seasons. A year back at Belle Vue Aces in 1998 was followed by a solitary season with the Hull Vikings. The next four seasons were spent with the Eastbourne Eagles before returning 'home' to Belle Vue in 2003, and enjoying a testimonial season the following year.

Joe Screen Official Buildbase Coventry Speedway Website BEES MOVE

After being released by Belle Vue following the 2008 season, Screen joined Elite League champions the Poole Pirates on loan for 2009, after losing 27 lbs in response to concerns over his weight. Despite improving his average over the season he was not retained by Poole. After failing to get an Elite League offer he agreed a two-year deal with Premier League Glasgow Tigers, but an appeal against his converted 12-point greensheet average was turned down, almost forcing him to retire. He was given a lifeline with a short-term deal with Wolverhampton Wolves for 2010, until Adam Skornicki returned from injury. His spell with Wolves saw his average drop sufficiently to fit into the Glasgow Tigers team, which he joined in May 2010, signing as a club asset for 2011, when he captained Glasgow to win both the Premier League Championship and the Premier League Pairs (alongside James Grieves). He also rode for Birmingham Brummies in the Elite League in 2011 and 2012 in a doubling-up capacity. In 2013 he rode for Coventry Bees in the Elite League as cover for the injured Adam Roynon, but after getting injured himself, his tenure there was short-lived.

Joe Screen Elite League speedway Morton frustrated as Screen is

Screen was the 1993 World Under-21 Champion. He made his debut for England in 1991 but did not ride for the renamed Great Britain team until 2002. Screen has twice been British Champion, in 1996 and 2004. He rode in the Speedway Grand Prix series between 1996 until 2001 (when he had to withdraw after breaking his thigh) and as a wild card in the British Grand Prix in 2002, appearing in 21 Grands Prix and scoring a total of 159 points.

Screen has also been involved in coaching young speedway riders and ran an academy at Buxton.

His grasstrack career included winning both the British 350cc Championship and the British 350cc Best Pairs in 1989, reaching the World Longtrack Final in 1993 and 1994, and British Masters Championship wins in 1992 and 1995.

Screen announced in June 2013 that he would be retiring from racing at the end of the season after 25 years in British league speedway, but a hand injury sustained in August brought his season to a premature end.

Individual World Championship

  • 1993 - Pocking, Rottalstadion - 13th - 5pts
  • World Pairs Championship

  • 1993 - Vojens, Speedway Center (with Martin Dugard / Gary Havelock) - 4th - 17pts (9)
  • World Team Cup

  • 1992 - Kumla, Kumla Speedway - 3rd - 31pts (2)
  • 1993 - Coventry, Brandon Stadium - 4th - 14pts (5)
  • 1999 - Pardubice, Svítkova Stadion - 4th - 29+2pts (4+2)
  • 2000 - Coventry, Brandon Stadium - 2nd - 40+0pts (12)
  • World Cup

  • 2005 - Wrocław, Olympic Stadium - 4th - 25pts (1)
  • Individual Under-21 World Championship

  • 1991 - Coventry, Brandon Stadium - 5th - 10pts
  • 1992 - Pfaffenhofen, Speedway Stadion Pfaffenhofen - 3rd - 13pts
  • 1993 - Pardubice, Svítkova Stadion - Winner - 14+3pts
  • World Longtrack Championship

    Finalist

  • 1993 - Muhldorf - 11th (9pts)
  • 1994 - Marianske Lazne - 12th (8pts)
  • Grand-Prix

  • 2000 - 16th (20pts) 1 app
  • British Masters Grasstrack Championship

    First

  • 1992 @ Wimborne & North Berks
  • 1995 @ North Berks & Severn Valley
  • 2003 @ Astra
  • Second

  • 1999 @ North Berks
  • 2002 @ Wainfleet
  • References

    Joe Screen Wikipedia