Hermann Paul Müller
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Hermann Paul Müller (born in Bielefeld, 21 November 1909 - died in Ingolstadt, 30 December 1975) was a German sidecar, motorcycle, and race car driver.
Müller started his competitive career on an Imperia in 1928. He became German Sidecar Champion in 1932, then in 1936, he took the German 500cc Motorcycle title.
He switched to cars the next year, driving for Auto Union. He won the 1939 edition of the FIA French Grand Prix held in Reims. The winner of that season's European Championship was never officially announced by the AIACR due to the outbreak of World War II. Although Müller would have won the championship on points, the president of Germany's highest motorsports organisation declared Hermann Lang the champion.[1]
After the war he returned to motorcycle racing, winning the 1947 and 1948 German 250cc titles on DKW. In 1955, he won the 250cc world championship riding an NSU Sportmax. He also set quite a number of world speed records in five classes over six distances for NSU on the Bonneville salt flats in 1956. To this day he remains the oldest person to win a Grand Prix Motorcycle world championship, at the age of 46.
References
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Sporting achievements | ||
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Preceded by | 250cc Motorcycle World Champion 1955 |
Succeeded by Carlo Ubbiali |
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- Pages with reference errors
- 1909 births
- 1975 deaths
- German motorcycle racers
- 125cc World Championship riders
- 250cc World Championship riders
- 500cc World Championship riders
- People from Bielefeld
- People from the Province of Westphalia
- German racing drivers
- Racing drivers from North Rhine-Westphalia
- National Socialist Motor Corps members
- German sportspeople stubs
- Motorcycle racing biography stubs