Malcolm Simmons (speedway rider) explained

Malcolm Simmons
Nationality:British (English)
Birth Date:20 March 1946
Birth Place:Tonbridge, England
Nickname:Simmo
Years1:1963
Career1:Hackney Hawks
Years2:1964-1967
Career2:West Ham Hammers
Years3:1968-1974, 1993
Career3:King's Lynn Stars
Years4:1975-1980
Career4:Poole Pirates
Years5:1981-1984
Career5:Wimbledon Dons
Years6:1985
Career6:Swindon Robins
Years7:1986-1987
Career7:Hackney Kestrels
Years8:1989
Indivyear1:1976
Indivhonour1:British Champion
Indivyear2:1974
Indivhonour2:Spring Classic
Indivyear3:1975, 1976, 1977, 1978
Indivhonour3:Blue Riband
Indivyear4:1976
Indivhonour4:Internationale
Indivyear5:1976
Indivhonour5:Littlechild Trophy
Indivyear6:1977
Indivhonour6:Superama
Indivyear7:1977
Indivhonour7:Southern Masters
Indivyear8:1982
Indivhonour8:The Laurels
Teamyear1:1973, 1974, 1975, 1977
Teamhonour1:World Team Cup Winner
Teamyear2:1976, 1977, 1978
Teamhonour2:World Pairs Champion
Teamyear3:1965
Teamhonour3:British League Champion
Teamyear4:1965
Teamhonour4:British League KO Cup Winner
Teamyear5:1965, 1966, 1967
Teamhonour5:London Cup
Teamyear6:1973
Teamhonour6:Spring Gold Cup

Malcolm Simmons (20 March 1946 – 25 May 2014) was a motorcycle speedway rider from England.[1] [2] He earned 73 international caps for the England national speedway team and five caps for the Great Britain team.[3]

Career

Simmons was born in Tonbridge, Kent. After starting in second-half races at New Cross, he made his Provincial League debut at Hackney Hawks in 1963 aged seventeen but was unable to break into the Hackney team regularly so moved to the newly re-opened West Ham Hammers for the 1964 season.[4] In 1965 Simmons won a British League and British League Knockout Cup double with West Ham. In 1968 he moved to the King's Lynn Stars and stayed there for the next seven seasons. He was consistently at the top of the Stars averages and scored over 2112 points for the club.[5]

Simmons signed for the Poole Pirates in 1975 from King's Lynn. In his first season for Poole in 31 league matches he achieved 16 maximum scores (15 full and 1 paid) and he became the first Poole rider to secure a 10-point average in the British League. Simmons topped the Pirates averages for the next six years and he came to be affectionately known by the Poole fans as 'Super Simmo'. In 1979 the Pirates were taken over by new owners and Simmons became unsettled, asking for a transfer in 1980. At a pairs event at Poole that year, Simmons was accused by the Poole management of not trying and he was subsequently sacked by the club.[5]

He moved to Wimbledon in 1981, where he spent four seasons and moved to the Swindon Robins for one season in 1985. Simmons signed for former club Hackey, now renamed Hackney Kestrels, in 1986 for two years before he suffered a bad shoulder injury. He then made a couple of short come-backs at Arena Essex and King's Lynn.[5]

Malcolm captained England and Great Britain at full international level. He finished runner-up to Peter Collins in the 1976 Speedway World Championship, but became World Pairs Champion with John Louis the same year. He again became World Pairs Champion in 1977 with Peter Collins, and again in 1978 with Gordon Kennett. Simmons became British Champion in 1976.[6] He won the World Team Cup on four occasions - 1973, 1974, 1975 and 1977 - once with Great Britain and three times with England.

He signed as a rider for Mildenhall in 2001 to ride occasionally in the Conference League, aged 56.

World Final Appearances

Individual World Championship

World Pairs Championship

World Team Cup

Notes and References

  1. Lawson,K (2018) “Riders, Teams and Stadiums”.
  2. Book: Montague, Trevor. The A-Z of Sport. 2004. 530. Little, Brown. 0-316-72645-1.
  3. Web site: ULTIMATE RIDER INDEX, 1929-2022 . British Speedway . 29 December 2023.
  4. Rogers, Martin (1963) "Hackney Hawks Here to Stay?", Speedway Star, 1 June 1963, p. 16
  5. Book: Bamford, Robert . Shailes, Glynn . 50 Poole Pirates Greats . . 2004 . 108–109 . 0-7524-3257-5 .
  6. Bamford, R. & Shailes, G. (2002). A History of the World Speedway Championship. Stroud: Tempus Publishing.