RACING DRIVER

Ingo Hoffmann

1953 - Today

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Ingo Ott Hoffmann (born 28 February 1953) is a Brazilian retired racing driver from São Paulo. He is most well known for winning the Brazilian Stock Car Championship 12 times (1980, 1985, 1989–1994, 1996–1998 and 2002). He also participated in six Formula One Grands Prix, debuting on 25 January 1976. He scored no championship points. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ingo Hoffmann is the 477th most popular racing driver (down from 459th in 2019), the 693rd most popular biography from Brazil (down from 654th in 2019) and the 17th most popular Brazilian Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Ingo Hoffmann ranks 477 out of 1,080Before him are Jacques Pollet, Yannick Dalmas, Dani Pedrosa, Tony Trimmer, Pastor Maldonado, and Ken Wharton. After him are Mark Blundell, Gerry Ashmore, Ottorino Volonterio, Olivier Grouillard, Marc Gené, and Casey Stoner.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1953, Ingo Hoffmann ranks 388Before him are Jürgen Kurths, Xabier Azkargorta, Adrie van Kraay, Gary Johnson, Sergei Starostin, and Roberta Williams. After him are Pedro López Quintana, Robert Cray, Georg Friedrich Haas, Lyle Mays, Teburoro Tito, and Ricky Steamboat.

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In Brazil

Among people born in Brazil, Ingo Hoffmann ranks 693 out of 2,236Before him are Alberto Nepomuceno (1864), Hernanes (1985), Luiz Carlos Ferreira (1958), Ivan Mariz (1910), Débora Falabella (1979), and Mário Brandão da Silveira (1987). After him are Gil (1950), Bruno Barreto (1955), Algisto Lorenzato (1910), Eliane Elias (1960), Valdir Espinosa (1947), and Douglas Luiz (1998).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Brazil

Among racing drivers born in Brazil, Ingo Hoffmann ranks 17Before him are Luiz Bueno (1937), Chico Landi (1907), Alex Ribeiro (1948), Christian Fittipaldi (1971), Fritz d'Orey (1938), and Maurício Gugelmin (1963). After him are Ricardo Zonta (1976), Raul Boesel (1957), Ricardo Rosset (1968), Alex Barros (1970), Cristiano da Matta (1973), and Herbert MacKay-Fraser (1922).