RACING DRIVER

Jean-Claude Rudaz

1942 - Today

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Jean-Claude Rudaz (born 23 July 1942) is a former racing driver from Switzerland. He made one attempt at a World Championship Formula One Grand Prix, at the 1964 Italian Grand Prix with a non-works Cooper T60, run by Fabre Urbain. He blew his engine in practice and was unable to start the race, despite qualifying 20th out of the 25 entrants. He also participated in the 1964 24 Hours of Le Mans. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jean-Claude Rudaz is the 689th most popular racing driver (up from 780th in 2019), the 681st most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 724th in 2019) and the 20th most popular Swiss Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Jean-Claude Rudaz ranks 689 out of 1,080Before him are Bernard de Dryver, Kenny Bräck, Antonio Giovinazzi, Mikko Hirvonen, Tony Settember, and Carlos Checa. After him are Liam Lawson, Duncan Hamilton, David Hobbs, John Rhodes, Isack Hadjar, and Ernst Klodwig.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1942, Jean-Claude Rudaz ranks 662Before him are Tom Mankiewicz, Eloy Campos, Barry Diller, Lyle Campbell, Molly Peters, and Tommy Roe. After him are Charlie Rose, Michele Lee, Jon Kyl, Dave Cutler, Juan Carlos Oleniak, and Guy Saint-Vil.

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In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Jean-Claude Rudaz ranks 681 out of 1,015Before him are Ludovic Magnin (1979), Peter Maurer (1956), Peter Stamm (1963), Yves Rossy (1959), Jürg Röthlisberger (1955), and Walter Schneiter (1918). After him are Gregor Kobel (1997), Lise-Marie Morerod (1956), Gregor Foitek (1965), Dario Cologna (1986), Patrick Müller (1976), and Alain Sutter (1968).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Switzerland

Among racing drivers born in Switzerland, Jean-Claude Rudaz ranks 20Before him are Ottorino Volonterio (1917), Heini Walter (1927), Albert Scherrer (1908), Sébastien Buemi (1988), Peter Hirt (1910), and Franco Forini (1958). After him are Gregor Foitek (1965), Thomas Lüthi (1986), Marcel Fässler (1976), Alain Menu (1963), Dominique Aegerter (1990), and Edoardo Mortara (1987).