Benoît Musy
Benoît Musy | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nationality | Swiss | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Benoît Nicolas Musy (December 13, 1917 – October 7, 1956) was a Swiss Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and Maserati race car driver.
Biography
Musy was born on December 13, 1917 in Bern, Switzerland, the son of the Swiss president Jean-Marie Musy. He received an agriculture engineering degree from L'institut agricole de l'Etat de Fribourg in Grangeneuve / FR - Switzerland, and served in the air force during the Swiss military mobilisation World War II. During 1944 he rescued a large number (1,200) of Jews from the concentration camp Theresienstadt with his father.[1] He also received one of the first Swiss parachute jumper licenses in 1947.[2]
Motor Sports Champion, part 1: motorcycle
He acquired further fame as a motorcycle racer, winning six Swiss championships with Moto Guzzi motorcycles. He also competed in the 1949 Swiss motorcycle Grand Prix, part of the inaugural Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. He competed in three more Swiss motorcycle Grand Prix races, finishing as high as fourth place.[3]
Motor Sports Champion, part 2: motorcar
Later he moved to racing cars. He had various ones, all Maserati. Musy started in May 1954, with a 1953 Maserati A6 or A6GCS (#2040),[4] a Maserati factory race car, formerly used by Giletti, the official Maserati pilot. With this car he has won several races, including some record laps, on different tracks. He sold the car in 1955 to Pietro Pagliarini.
At that time, Benoît Musy was already part of the semi-official driver of Maserati. He took part of several races with very little success on Maserati 150, Maserati 200S and Maserati 200Si. He even participated at a race in Dakar (Sénégal) with a Maserati 250. He did not finish.[5]
After a test drive in the Swedish Grand Prix, he bought a Maserati 300S (#3057) in 1955 with which he earned several podium results.
Musy died in a racing event at Autodrome de Montlhéry, France, on October 7, 1956, crashing a factory Maserati 200S (#2047) over an embankment after a steering column breakdown. Ejected from the car, he died immediately. In total, he attended eleven mid-1950s European sports car championships, of which he won five.[6]
Auto racing results
Year | Position | Racetrack - Country | Car |
---|---|---|---|
1954 | 1st | Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium) | Maserati 2000cc A6GCS |
1954 | 4th | Aquila racetrack (Switzerland) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 1st | Megève racetrack best time ever (France) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 2nd | Senigallia racetrack (Italy) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 2nd | Senigallia racetrack (Italy) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 2nd | Circuit Park Zandvoort (Netherland) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 2nd | Circuit Bremgarten Swiss Grand-Prix | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 2nd | Kandersteg racetrack (Switzerland) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 1st | Autodrome de Linas-Montlhéry (France) | Maserati 2000cc |
1954 | 1st | Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium) | Maserati 2000cc |
1955 | 1st | Grand Prix des Frontières (Chimay Street Circuit) (Belgium) | Maserati 3000cc 300S |
1955 | 4th | Porto Grand Prix (Monsanto Park) (Portugal) | Maserati 3000cc |
1955 | 2nd | Messina 10 h night race (Italy) | Masearti 3000cc |
1955 | 1st | Karlskoga – Kanonloppet (Sweden) | Maserati 3000cc |
1956 | 1st | first heat Oulton Park best time ever (UK) | Maserati 3000 cc |
1956 | 1st | Grand Prix des Frontières (Chimay Street Circuit) (Belgium) | Maserati 3000cc |
1956 | 4th | Bari Grand Prix (Italy) | Maserati 3000 cc |
1956 | 1st | Sables-d'Olonne Grand-Prix (France) | Maserati 3000 cc |
References
- ↑ "Holocaust Rescue". musy.net. October 2013. Retrieved 2013-26-13. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ "Benoît Musy Parachute jumper". musy.net. October 2013. Retrieved 2013-26-13. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ "Benoit Musy career statistics at". Motogp.com. Retrieved 2010-10-09.
- ↑ "Maserati A6GCS". Conceptcarz.com. Retrieved 2010-10-09.
- ↑ Maserati 250
- ↑ "Maserati 150/200S Benoît Musy accident in Montlhéry France". musy.net. October 2013. Retrieved 2013-26-13. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help)
External links
- Benoît Musy biography
- Benoît Musy & Maserati racing
- Benoît Musy biographie (French)
- Enrico Maserati pages: Maserati 200
- History and pictures about B. Musy (Spanish)
- Two different people from the same place: Jo Siffert and B. Musy (French)