2001 Australian Individual Speedway Championship

The 2001 Australian Individual Speedway Championship was held at the Riverview Speedway in Murray Bridge, South Australia on 3 February.

2001 Australian Individual Speedway Championship
Previous: 2000 Next: 2002

Former World #3 Todd Wiltshire won his second Australian Championship after defeating defending champion Leigh Adams in a runoff.[1] Mick Poole from New South Wales finished third after defeating Perth's Steve Johnston in a runoff, while Shane Parker defeated fellow Adelaide riders Brett Woodifield and Nigel Sadler in a runoff to claim the final spot in the Overseas Final.

2001 Australian Solo Championship

  • 3 February 2001
  • Murray Bridge - Riverview Speedway
  • Referee:
  • Qualification: The top five riders go through to the Overseas Final in Poole, England.
Pos.RiderPointsDetails
Todd Wiltshire ()14+3
Leigh Adams ()14+2
Mick Poole ()10+3
4Steve Johnston ()10+2
5Shane Parker ()9+3
6Brett Woodifield ()9+2
7Nigel Sadler ()9+1
8Craig Watson ()8
9Jason Lyons ()7
10Travis McGowan ()6
11Adam Shields ()5
12Lee Redmond ()4
13Rusty Harrison ()4
14Davey Watt ()2
15Dean Wiseman ()2
16Christian Henry ()1
gollark: This isn't a paradox. It can't simulate arbitrarily large CGoL grids.
gollark: Nope! Many languages, abstractly speaking, *don't* have limited memory. Their implementations might, though.
gollark: No, Turing completeness means it can simulate any Turing machine. It *can't* do that if it has limited memory.
gollark: I don't know exactly what its instruction set is like. But if it has finite-sized addresses, it can probably access finite amounts of memory, and thus is not Turing-complete.
gollark: *Languages* can be, since they often don't actually specify memory limits, implementations do.

References

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.