SWINDON legend Leigh Adams hailed the fans after bringing down the curtain on his Blunsdon career in perfect style last night, by winning his farewell meeting with a stunning 18-point maximum.

The Aussie ended his 20-year association with the Robins by romping to six race wins out of six in front of a packed house at the Abbey Stadium, with the 39-year-old seeing off Chris Holder, Matej Zagar and Simon Stead in the grand final.

He was then paraded before supporters for a final farewell lap before being mobbed on both the centre green and in the pits.

“The support I've had has been incredible and it's blown me away,” Adams told the Advertiser afterwards.

“I must have done something right in my 22 years. Tonight was a great atmosphere and I couldn't believe the crowd, especially when they stayed on right at the end.

“I just can't thank everyone enough because I've had fantastic support.”

Adams begun the meeting as he has so many over the years, gating on his way to a heat one triumph, with his superb time of 63.96 just a tenth of a second outside his own lap record.

After wins for Richard Sweetman, Troy Batchelor and Tai Woffinden, Adams showed rock-solid nerve after being out-gated by Woffinden in heat five, zipping past the Wolves man on a ultra-tight bend two and romping to victory from there.

After Holder tasted success, Adams was typically brilliant in heat nine, leaving Sweetman, Shane Parker and Jason Lyons for dust at the gate.

Mads Korneliussen, Darcy Ward and Stead all took three points apiece before ex-Robins boss Alun Rossiter squeezed back into his kevlars to beat Californian veteran Shawn McConnell in a sideshow to the main event.

Adams had work to do in heat 13 when Stead and Cameron Woodward got the run on him at the start, but the Blunsdon skipper charged round the outside of the latter on bend two and then inched past teammate Stead towards the end of the back straight.

Korneliussen, Batchelor and Holder all took the chequered flag, before race 17 provided Adams with his fifth straight victory, as he just edged Batchelor to the first corner and was not troubled after that.

Another demonstration win for Rossiter followed, before Woffinden and Parker engaged in the bizarre prospect of naked speedway, shedding their kevlars to ride round Blunsdon wearing nothing but a crash helmet each, much to the amusement of the watching supporters.

The meeting ended with the serious action, though, as Adams survived pressure from Holder throughout the grand final to end his Swindon tenure in fitting style.