Marc Surer
Surer at the 1982 Dutch Grand Prix | |
Born | (1951-09-18) 18 September 1951 (age 72) Arisdorf, Switzerland |
---|---|
Formula One World Championship career | |
Nationality | Swiss |
Active years | 1979–1986 |
Teams | Ensign, ATS, Theodore, Arrows, Brabham |
Entries | 88 (82 starts) |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 0 |
Podiums | 0 |
Career points | 17 |
Fastest laps | 1 |
First entry | 1979 Italian Grand Prix |
Last entry | 1986 Belgian Grand Prix |
Marc Surer (born 18 September 1951) is a former racing driver from Switzerland currently working as TV commentator and racing school instructor. He participated in 88 Formula One World Championship Grands Prix, debuting on 9 September 1979. He scored a total of 17 championship points.
Racing career
Surer started his career in karting in 1972. Due to the racing ban established in Switzerland after the 1955 Le Mans disaster, he moved to Germany in 1974, where he finished second in the local Formula Vee Championship. In 1976, he switched to European Formula 3, where he was noticed by Jochen Neerpasch, who hired him as a member of the BMW Junior Team alongside Eddie Cheever and Manfred Winkelhock. In 1978, he finished second in the Formula 2 Championship, eventually winning the series the following year in a works March-BMW.
Surer's debut in Formula 1 took place at the end of 1979 and was somewhat troubled. He broke his legs in qualifying at the South African Grand Prix in an ATS at Kyalami in 1980 and again racing there in 1981 for Ensign. He recovered to give Ensign their best result with a 4th-place finish at the 1981 Brazilian Grand Prix, also setting the fastest lap of the race. He later drove for Theodore before establishing himself at Arrows for a couple of seasons, until BMW's support earned him a seat at Brabham for 1985. Surer returned to Arrows in 1986 but eventually retired from Formula One halfway through the season due to serious accident at the 1986 ADAC Hessen-Rallye in his Ford RS200 severely injured him and killed his co-driver and friend Michel Wyder. BMW retained him as a driver, coach and later director of motorsport activities. In 1994 and 1995, Surer, alongside Johnny Cecotto and Jo Winkelhock, won the German Super Touring Car Championship.
In 1996, Surer began working as a television commentator at all Formula 1 events for Sky Sport (Germany) (formerly known as DF1 and Premiere) next to the lead commentator Jacques Schulz. After Schulz's withdrawal prior to the 2013 season, he has remained commentator alongside Sascha Roos.
Formula One all-time ranking
In 2016, in an academic paper that reported a mathematical modeling study that assessed the relative influence of driver and machine, Surer was ranked the 17th best Formula One driver of all time.[1]
Personal life
Surer has been married twice to former Playboy models, first to Playmate Jolanda Egger, and then to Christina Surer between 1997 and 2000. On 3 December 2011 he married his longtime partner Silvia Renée Arias.[2]
Racing record
Career summary
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (December 2021) |
† As Surer was a guest driver, he was ineligible for championship points.
Complete European Formula Two Championship results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | Pos. | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1976 | Hohmann Racing | Chevron B35 | BMW | HOC | THR | VAL | SAL | PAU | HOC | ROU | MUG | PER | EST | NOG | HOC DNQ | NC | 0 | |
1977 | Hohmann Auto Technik | March 762 | BMW | SIL 9 | THR 7 | HOC Ret | NÜR | VAL 7 | PAU | MUG 5 | ROU Ret | NOG 7 | PER | MIS | EST | 13th | 5 | |
March Engineering | March 772P | DON 4 | ||||||||||||||||
1978 | Polifac BMW Junior Team | March 782 | BMW | THR 2 | HOC 2 | NÜR 4 | PAU 3 | MUG 2 | VAL 9 | ROU 3 | DON 3 | NOG 2 | PER Ret | MIS 2 | HOC 2 | 2nd | 51 | |
1979 | Polifac BMW Junior Team | March 792 | BMW | SIL DNS | HOC Ret | THR 9 | NÜR 1 | VAL 1 | MUG Ret | PAU 3 | HOC 5 | ZAN 3 | PER Ret | MIS 3 | DON 2 | 1st | 38 | |
1981 | Marcus Hotz Racing | March 812 | BMW | SIL | HOC Ret | THR 12 | NÜR | VAL | MUG | PAU | PER | SPA | DON | MIS | MAN | NC | 0 |
Complete Formula One World Championship results
(key) (races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results
Year | Team | Co-Drivers | Car | Class | Laps | Pos. | Class Pos. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | Artos Francy Sauber PP AG | Eugen Straehl Harry Blumer | Sauber C 5 | S 2.0 | 257 | NC | NC |
1981 | Würth-Lubrifilm Team Sauber | David Deacon Dieter Quester | BMW M1 | Gr.5 | 207 | DNF | DNF |
1982 | Ford Germany Zakspeed | Klaus Ludwig Manfred Winkelhock | Ford C100 | C | 67 | DNF | DNF |
Sources
- Profile at www.grandprix.com
References
Sporting positions | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | European Formula Two Champion 1979 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
- Andrea Bertolini
- Christophe Bouchut
- Frédéric Bouvy
- Alexander Burgstaller
- Luigi Chinetti
- Romain Dumas
- Fabrizio Gollin
- Jules Gounon
- Armin Hahne
- Altfrid Heger
- Mike Hezemans
- Eddy Joosen
- Helmut Kelleners
- Philippe Martin
- Kurt Mollekens
- Win Percy
- René Rast
- Timo Scheider
- Bernd Schneider
- Francesco Severi
- Steve Soper
- Laurens Vanthoor
- Tom Walkinshaw
- Markus Winkelhock
- Jean Xhenceval
- Uwe Alzen
- Jean-Claude Andruet
- Claude Ballot-Lena
- Earl Bamber
- Maurice Becquet
- Anthony Beltoise
- Jean-Philippe Belloc
- Robert Benoist
- Gerhard Berger
- Jörg Bergmeister
- Tom Blomqvist
- André Boillot
- Sébastien Bourdais
- David Brabham
- Gianfranco Brancatelli
- Antonio Brivio
- Lilian Bryner
- Maximilian Buhk
- Nicolas Caerels
- Enzo Calderari
- Luca Cappellari
- Nick Catsburg
- Johnny Cecotto
- Guy Chasseuil
- Louis Chiron
- Michael Christensen
- Emmanuel Collard
- Robert Crevits
- Alain Cudini
- Christian Danner
- Hughes de Fierlandt
- Didier Defourny
- Jean-Denis Délétraz
- Nico Demuth
- Didier de Radiguès
- Jean Desvignes
- Jean-Marie Detrin
- Mattias Ekström
- Kévin Estre
- Marcel Fässler
- Giuseppe Farina
- Christian Fittipaldi
- Greg Franchi
- Jean-Pierre Gaban
- Pietro Ghersi
- Fabien Giroix
- Dieter Glemser
- Maximilian Götz
- Gustave Gosselin
- Christopher Haase
- Hubert Hahne
- Naoki Hattori
- Mike Hawthorn
- Éric Hélary
- Wolf Henzler
- Toine Hezemans
- St. John Horsfall
- Günther Huber
- Jacky Ickx
- Pascal Ickx
- Boris Ivanowski
- Jean-Pierre Jarier
- Leslie Johnson
- Dimitri Jorjadze
- Daniel Juncadella
- Willi Kauhsen
- Peter Kox
- Erwin Kremer
- Christian Krognes
- Anthony Kumpen
- André Lagache
- Gérard Langlois van Ophem
- Côme Ledogar
- René Léonard
- Marc Lieb
- Richard Lietz
- Jean Lucas
- Lucas Luhr
- Norbert Mahé
- Raffaele Marciello
- Maxime Martin
- Jochen Mass
- Jos Menten
- Jörg Müller
- Nicklas Nielsen
- Markus Östreich
- Anders Olofsson
- Stéphane Ortelli
- Markus Palttala
- Alain Peltier
- Andrea Piccini
- Alessandro Pier Guidi
- Teddy Pilette
- Carlo Pintacuda
- Martin Ragginger
- Louis Rigal
- Stéphane Sarrazin
- Robert Sénéchal
- Eugenio Siena
- Alexander Sims
- Àlex Soler-Roig
- Raymond Sommer
- Gordon Spice
- Henri Springuel
- Frank Stippler
- Hans-Joachim Stuck
- Marc Surer
- Nick Tandy
- David Terrien
- Didier Theys
- Noël van Assche
- Charles van Stalle
- Vincent Vosse
- Joachim Winkelhock
- Marco Wittmann
- Nick Yelloly
- Goffredo Zehender