RACING DRIVER

Armin Schwarz

1963 - Today

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Armin Schwarz (born 16 July 1963) is a German rally driver. He competed in the World Rally Championship from 1988 to 2005, winning the 1991 Rally Catalunya and taking six other podium finishes. Outside the WRC, he won the German Rally Championship (1987–88), the European Rally Championship (1996) and the "Rally Masters" event at the Race of Champions (2000). Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Armin Schwarz is the 572nd most popular racing driver (down from 557th in 2019), the 5,361st most popular biography from Germany (down from 5,289th in 2019) and the 47th most popular German Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Armin Schwarz ranks 572 out of 1,080Before him are Daijiro Kato, Nasif Estéfano, Chris Lawrence, Kenneth McAlpine, Ricardo Tormo, and Oscar Piastri. After him are Bertil Roos, Corrado Fabi, Beppe Gabbiani, Lamberto Leoni, Gino Munaron, and Kenneth Eriksson.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1963, Armin Schwarz ranks 403Before him are Scott Ian, Larry the Cable Guy, Jaaved Jaaferi, Christopher Heyerdahl, Vanessa Estelle Williams, and Sylvain Chomet. After him are Viktar Babaryka, Milan Luhový, Lori Petty, Rand Paul, Candan Erçetin, and Stefan Pettersson.

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In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Armin Schwarz ranks 5,364 out of 7,253Before him are Brigitte Kronauer (1940), Egon Günther (1927), Uli Vos (1946), Lucie Mannheim (1899), Herbert Fandel (1964), and Dietmar Woidke (1961). After him are Dieter Eilts (1964), Jürgen Trittin (1954), Thomas Strunz (1968), Wilhelm Bungert (1939), Paul Kalkbrenner (1977), and Uwe Ochsenknecht (1956).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Germany

Among racing drivers born in Germany, Armin Schwarz ranks 47Before him are Erwin Bauer (1912), Joachim Winkelhock (1960), Toni Ulmen (1906), Oswald Karch (1917), Josef Peters (1914), and Hans Klenk (1919). After him are Helmut Niedermayr (1915), Rudolf Krause (1907), Volker Weidler (1962), Günther Bechem (1921), Rudolf Schoeller (1902), and Willi Heeks (1922).