Kacper Gomólski

Kacper Gomólski (['kat͡spɛr ˈɡɔmulski] ; born 2 March 1993 in Gniezno, Poland) is a Polish motorcycle speedway rider.[1]

Kacper Gomólski
Born (1993-03-02) 2 March 1993
Gniezno, Poland
NationalityPolish
Career history
Poland
2008–2011Gniezno
2012–2014Tarnów
2015–2016Toruń
2017, 2019–2020Gdańsk
2018Zielona Góra
2021Rybnik
2022Poznań
Great Britain
2011Peterborough
2013Swindon
2015Poole
2017Leicester
Sweden
2019Dackarna
2022Masarna
Denmark
2013–2018Grindsted
2021Esbjerg

Career

Gomólski, the younger brother of fellow Speedway rider Adrian Gomólski and son of Jacek Gomólski began his Polish Speedway career in 2008, racing for hometown club Start Gniezno who he rode for until 2011. He moved to Unia Tarnów for three seasons and then on to Unibax Toruń for two more. He has since ridden for Gdańsk for three seasons, Zielona Góra (2018), Rybnik (2021) and Poznań in 2022.

He was given his first opportunity in British Speedway by the Peterborough Panthers, before moving to the Swindon Robins at the age of just 19.[2] He endured a tough season at Swindon and he found himself without a club in the Britain for the 2014 season. In 2015 Gomólski was back in British Speedway, this time with reigning Elite League champions the Poole Pirates. Poole promoter Matt Ford defended the decision to sign Gomólski, insisting that he would prove to be "an absolute steal" and that he is a "dramatically different" rider now to the one that most British Speedway fans would remember from the Swindon Robins.[3]

In 2022, he helped PSŻ Poznań win the 2022 2.Liga.[4]

References

  1. "Kacper Gomólski Polska". Polish Speedway Database. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  2. "Swindon Robins sign rising Polish star Kacper Gomolski for 2013". Sky Sports. 7 December 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  3. "Speedway: Maciej Janowski and Kacper Gomolski complete Poole Pirates one-to-seven". Bournemouth Echo. 11 March 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  4. "2022 Liga 2 results". Flash Score. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.