United States national speedway team


The United States national speedway team are an international motorcycle speedway team governed by the American Motorcyclist Association. They compete in the major international speedway competitions, including the Speedway World Cup and Speedway of Nations and the former events the Speedway World Team Cup and the World Pairs Championship.

History

After Jack Milne and his brother Cordy Milne had finished first and third at the 1937 World Final, the U.S. went into the speedway wilderness until the early 1970s, when international riders such as world champions Barry Briggs and Ivan Mauger from New Zealand began visiting the Costa Mesa Speedway in Los Angeles. Scott Autrey's appearance in the 1976 World Final in Poland, was the first American appearance since Ernie Roccio had finished 15th in 1951.
Autrey, who in the mid-1970s had campaigned hard and successfully to have American riders included in the Speedway World Championship, signalled an American resurgence in speedway and was soon followed by others, such as 1981 and 1982 world champion Bruce Penhall, brothers Kelly and Shawn Moran, Bobby Schwartz, Dennis Sigalos, Lance King, 1993 Individual Speedway World Championship world champion Sam Ermolenko, Rick Miller, 1996 world champion Billy Hamill, and four times world champion Greg Hancock all going on to be regarded as some of the world's best speedway riders.

Major tournament wins

Speedway World Cup

The team has won the Speedway World Team Cup on five occasions, including their first win in 1982 which gave the U.S. the "Triple Crown" of speedway by winning the Individual, World Pairs and World Team Cup in the same year. The U.S. were a major force in the early 1990s, winning 3 out of 4 tournaments. Key riding members of the title wins include Billy Hamill, Sam Ermolenko and Greg Hancock.
The finals of both the 1985 and 1988 World Team Cups were held at the Veterans Memorial Stadium in Long Beach, California.
YearVenueStandings RidersPts
1982

International caps (as of 2022)

Since the advent of the Speedway Grand Prix era, international caps earned by riders is largely restricted to international competitions, whereas previously test matches between two teams were a regular occurrence. This means that the number of caps earned by a rider has decreased in the modern era.
RiderCaps
Autrey, Scott22
Bast, Bart3
Bast, Steve5
Burmesiter, Tyson1
Chrisco, Keith1
Cook, John49
Correy, Ronnie23
Curoso, Mike1
Ermolenko, Charles9
Ermolenko, Sam51
Faria, Mike7
Fisher, Ryan8
Green, Randy3
Gresham, Steve20
Hamill, Billy29
Hancock, Greg39
Ingalls, Kenny3
Ingels, Eddie3
Janniro, Billy11
Keeter, DeWayne2
Kerr, Chris3
King, Lance47
Kosta, Larry4
Lamoreaux, Wilbur3
Larsen, Josh11
Lucero, Steve3
Manchester, Chris3
Miller, Rick34
Milne, Cordy3
Milne, Jack3
Moran, Kelly47
Moran, Shawn74
Nicol, Doug4
Odom, Donny1
Ott, Bobby15
Oxley, Brad12
Penhall, Bruce34
Pfetzing, Robert9
Preston, Ron14
Pyeatt, Denny10
Schwartz, Bobby74
Sigalos, Dennis52
Venegas, Charlie1
Wells, Ricky4
Werner, Brent15
Woods, Rick3