Grigory Khlinovsky
Born | 11 November 1947 (1947-11-11) (age 76) Rivne, Soviet Union |
---|---|
Nationality | Soviet / Ukrainian |
Individual honours | |
1972, 1973, 1974 | Speedway World Championship finalist |
Team honours | |
1971, 1972 | World Team Cup silver |
1973 | World Team Cup bronze |
Grigory Alexandrovich Khlinovsky (born 11 November 1947) is a former international motorcycle speedway rider from the Soviet Union.[1]
Speedway career
Khlinovsky reached the final of the Speedway World Championship on three consecutive years, in the 1972 Individual Speedway World Championship, 1973 Individual Speedway World Championship and the 1974 Individual Speedway World Championship.[2] He was one of six Russians that competed in the 1972 World final after strong performances in the Continental final and European final.[3]
In 1973, he was part of the Soviet team that secured the bronze medal at the 1973 Speedway World Team Cup.[4]
He was the senior coach of "Signal" team (Rivne) (1982-1989). Under his leadership "Signal" became the champion of the USSR for three times in a row (1985-1987). He was the senior coach of KAMAZ (Rivne) in 1990 and Signal (Rivne) in 1991. He is the honored coach of Ukraine, referee of the national category.
World final appearances
Individual World Championship
- 1972 – London, Wembley Stadium – 13th – 4pts[5]
- 1973 – Chorzów, Silesian Stadium – 5th – 10pts
- 1974 – Gothenburg, Ullevi – 10th – 6pts
World Pairs Championship
- 1974 – Manchester, Hyde Road (with Vladimir Gordeev) – 6th – 10pts
World Team Cup
- 1971 - Wroclaw, Olympic Stadium (with Vladimir Smirnov / Vladimir Gordeev / Viktor Trofimov / Anatoly Kuzmin) - 2nd - 22pts (8)
- 1972 - Olching, (with Anatoly Kuzmin / Viktor Trofimov / Viktor Kalmykov) - 2nd - 21 + 7 pts (5 + 1)
- 1973 - London, Wembley Stadium (with Vladimir Paznikov / Valery Gordeev / Viktor Trofimov / Aleksandr Pavlov) - 3rd - 20pts (7)
- 1976 - London, White City Stadium (with Viktor Trofimov / Valery Gordeev / Vladimir Gordeev / Vladimir Paznikov) - 4th - 11pts (2)
References
- ^ "WORLD INDIVIDUAL FINAL - RIDER INDEX". British Speedway. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
- ^ "World Speedway finals" (PDF). Speedway Researcher. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
- ^ "1972 World Championship results". Speedway.org. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
- ^ "1973 WORLD TEAM CUP". International Speedway. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
- ^ "4-Timer Mauger". Sunday Mirror. 17 September 1972. Retrieved 9 July 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.