RACING DRIVER

Marcel Fässler

1976 - Today

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Marcel Fässler (born 27 May 1976) is a Swiss former racing driver. From 2010 to 2016 he competed in the FIA World Endurance Championship as part of Audi Sport Team Joest with co-drivers André Lotterer and Benoît Tréluyer, winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans three times (2011, 2012, and 2014) and capturing the World Endurance Drivers' Championship in 2012. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Marcel Fässler is the 911th most popular racing driver (up from 926th in 2019), the 809th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 829th in 2019) and the 23rd most popular Swiss Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Marcel Fässler ranks 911 out of 1,080Before him are Shinya Nakano, Sam Posey, Max Papis, Adam Carroll, Thomas Lüthi, and Mika Kallio. After him are Gary Paffett, Joan Mir, Danica Patrick, Álex Rins, Chuck Stevenson, and Rio Haryanto.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Marcel Fässler ranks 646Before him are Mirosław Szymkowiak, Ángel Matos, Nicolas Escudé, Jon Robert Holden, Agustín Calleri, and Ken Anderson. After him are Volodymyr Yezerskiy, Florentin Petre, Federico Magallanes, Emmanuelle Gagliardi, Viktoriya Isakova, and Laura Harris.

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In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Marcel Fässler ranks 809 out of 1,015Before him are Thomas Wyss (1966), Thomas Lüthi (1986), Silvan Widmer (1993), Patrick Sylvestre (1968), Wendy Holdener (1993), and Beat Feuz (1987). After him are Martin Gerber (1974), Sébastien Fournier (1971), Renato Steffen (1991), Brigitte Oertli (1962), Francine Jordi (1977), and Fabian Frei (1989).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Switzerland

Among racing drivers born in Switzerland, Marcel Fässler ranks 23Before him are Sébastien Buemi (1988), Peter Hirt (1910), Franco Forini (1958), Jean-Claude Rudaz (1942), Gregor Foitek (1965), and Thomas Lüthi (1986). After him are Alain Menu (1963), Dominique Aegerter (1990), Edoardo Mortara (1987), Neel Jani (1983), Simona de Silvestro (1988), and Fabio Leimer (1989).