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Wilkie book
Thursday 29th July 2010
Junior Championship
LOCAL rider Jason Garrity split Australians Nick Morris and Jake Anderson on the rostrum after an entertaining Belle Vue Junior championship at Kirkmanshulme Lane on Wednesday night.

Morris won the title with 14 points while Droylsden-based Garrity, his teammate at Buxton, beat Somerset's Anderson in a run-off for second after the pair had finished level on 13.


American Gino Manzares showed why he was one of the meeting favourites by winning his first two races but he crashed heavily in the next and withdrew from the meeting after damaging his lower back.

Aces team boss Chris Morton said: "I was very impressed with the talent on view. Our track is not easy to come to if you aren't used to it and the way the youngsters handled it was a credit to them all."
 

Tuesday 27th July 2010
Weekly Press Release

BELLE Vue old boys Joe Screen, Simon Stead and Rory Schlein will be coming home next Monday aiming to leave the current Aces stars with red faces.

The trio have been invited to race in the prestige Peter Craven Trophy in memory of the club's double World champion who died following a track crash in 1963.

The veteran Screen, having a great run after dropping down a division to join Premier League Glasgow, knows his way around the tricky Kirkmanshulme Lane track as well as anyone.

Stead, now with Swindon, and Peterborough's Aussie star Schlein, will be sharp after racing in this week's World Cup.

They will pose a potent threat to Grand Prix men Hans Andersen, captain of the Autogate Aces and the Danish World Cup side, plus Great Britain and Coventry skipper, Chris Harris.

Belle Vue team boss Chris Morton said: “We have aimed for a mix of our own riders, plus former Belle Vue men as well as established stars and some newer names.

“We've invited Stead, who is having such a good season at Swindon. He rode well the last time he came here and he will fancy his chances of winning it.

“Harris and Schlein also do well at Belle Vue so they should be up there challenging along with our boys.

“We have brought in some up-and-coming riders like our No 8, Josh Grajczonek, and Newcastle's Kenni Larsen so they can test themselves against top Elite League riders. They will be really keen to take some big scalps.

“It is unfortunate that Kevin Doolan and Kalle Katajisto had to pull out this week because of injuries.”

They have been replaced by Sheffield's Czech rider, Josef Franc, and Workington No 1, Chris Schramm.

The Aces are lining up a carnival family night in view of children being on school holiday and able to stay up later.

Gates will open at 5.30, an hour earlier than usual, as there will be vintage bikes on view as well as a display by the Speedway Museum. The Men in Black will have three six-man heats on their vintage bikes at 6.30.

Souvenir tickets will be available at £2, just inside the turnstiles, for a two-lap ride round the track on a vintage 53 double decker bus which used to bring fans to the old Hyde Road stadium. They will run at 6.45 and 7.0 before being parked on the back straight so fans with tickets can stay on board to watch the racing.

Also a unique speedway bike, which has a special place in Belle Vue history, will make its first public appearance for nearly 70 years.

It was built by legendary Aces rider Eric Langton, who raced in the first Belle Vue meeting to be held at Kirkmanshulme Lane in 1928, in the late 1930s and has been restored by Peter Collins, the club's 1976 World champion who will bring a selection of his collection.

Said Collins: “Peter Craven used a Langton bike when he started out. It has taken me four years to restore this one. I have only just finished and it looks absolutely gorgeous.

“It will be fitting for it to make its first public appearance for many years at the Peter Craven meeting.”

The field, in draw order, is: Rory Schlein (Peterborough), Josh Grajczonek (Glasgow), Peter Karlsson (Belle Vue), Chris Schramm (Workington), Patrick Hougaard (Belle Vue), Kenni Larsen (Newcastle), Leigh Lanham (Belle Vue), Simon Stead (Swindon), Hans Andersen (Belle Vue), Kyle Legault (Newport), Josef Franc (Sheffield), James Wright (Belle Vue), Ulrich Ostergaard (Belle Vue), Ricky Ashworth (Sheffield), Joe Screen (Glasgow), Chris Harris (Coventry).

The Aces have seven Elite League matches left this season, four of them at home and three away. They are: Home – Peterborough (August 9), Poole (Aug 16), Swindon (Aug 23), Coventry (Sept 6). Away- Eastbourne (Aug 12), Coventry (Aug 30), Ipswich (Sept 9).



Monday 26th July 2010
Langton bike at Craven Meeting

A unique speedway bike, which has a special place in Belle Vue history, will make its first public appearance for nearly 70 years at the Peter Craven Memorial Trophy meeting on August 2.

It was built by legendary Aces rider Eric Langton, who raced in the first Belle Vue meeting to be held at Kirkmanshulme Lane in 1928, before he became a key member of the all-conquering side that dominated the 1930s.

Langton, runner-up in the first World final in 1936, built his own frames which he powered with the famous JAP engines which he tuned himself at his workshop in Bradford.

He retired from racing in 1947 and two bikes he built, one at the start of the 1930s and the other towards the end of the decade, were left in his garage for ten years.

He emigrated to Perth, Australia in 1957 and the bikes were passed on to his older brother, Oliver, another Belle Vue star.

The stayed with Oliver until he died in 1978 and former rider, Manchester-based Roy Chappell, bought all Eric's speedway gear including the bikes.

Subsequently, former Belle Vue star and 1976 World champion Peter Collins bought them and he has spent the last four years restoring the later of the two machines.

Said Peter: “They were Eric's original bikes but he just left them behind when he emigrated. He made them himself which is why I was so pleased to be able to buy them.

“He made bikes for others riders as well as himself and Peter Craven, who won two World titles at Belle Vue, used a Langton bike when he started out.

“It has taken me four years to restore this bike. It has been a big job and I have only just finished. It looks absolutely gorgeous.

“It will be fitting for it to make its first public appearance for many years at the Peter Craven meeting. I will bring some of the other machines in my collection including the one on which I finished second in the 1977 World final in Gothenburg.”

There is another Langton bike still in existence apart from those in the Collins collection. He added: “Eric was the promoter at Sheffield for some years before he emigrated and the bike was left there before being sent out to him in Perth where I have been to see it.”

Langton, born in Leeds in 1907, died in 2000.

Also on show next Monday will be the Peter Craven bike which is now owned by Roy Chappell.



Saturday 24th July 2010
Peter Craven Trophy news

MANCHESTER'S famous 53 bus service, which has a place in the hearts of many long-time Belle Vue speedway fans, is to run again!

The double deckers, which used to take thousands of supporters to meetings in the Aces' heyday when more 20,000 fans crammed into matches, are coming out of the Greater Manchester Museum of Transport for the Peter Craven Memorial Trophy meeting on August 2.

The buses were an unexpectedly big hit when they drove back up Hyde Road for the 80 th  Anniversary meeting two years ago.

Now the Aces are making the Craven meeting, in memory of the club's double World champion who died after a crash in 1963, another carnival night.

Steve Casey, the club's Meeting Presenter, said: “It stirred a lot of interest and nostalgia when the 53 buses came last time because so many fans used them to get to matches. They have been asking for us to bring them back again so we have.

“When fans have come through the turnstiles they will be able to buy a £2 ticket for a two-lap bus ride round the speedway track. Then the buses will be parked on the back straight and supporters will be able to stay on them to watch the racing.”

The turnstiles will open an hour earlier than usual at 5-30 for extra attractions including a display of vintage bikes, including some from the collection for the club's 1976 World champion Peter Collins, and racing by the Men In Black on their old bikes.

There will also be face painting and a bouncy castle for children.

Casey added: “We want to make it a real family night out. Some don't come during the school term because it means kids would get to bed too late but they will be on holiday now.”

Grand Prix stars Hans Andersen, the Belle Vue captain, and Chris Harris, the British champion, will be favourites to land the Peter Craven Trophy.



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