1939 Grand Prix season

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1939 Grand Prix season

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1939 AIACR European Championship season
European Champion
None
Officially undeclared due to outbreak of war[1]
Previous: 1938 Next: none
1939 Grand Prix season
Previous: 1938 Next: 1940–1945
Last full season before wartime.

The 1939 Grand Prix season was the seventh AIACR European Championship season. The championship winner was never officially announced by the AIACR due to the outbreak of World War II less than two weeks after the final event in Switzerland. The Italian GP initially had been a fifth event, but it became clear well before the war that it would be cancelled due to construction work. At that time, it was also undecided which scoring system would be used, the old minimum points system that basically counted positions, or the French maximum points system similar to the modern one. Although Hermann Paul Müller would have won the championship on points according to the old system, the president of Nazi Germany's highest motorsports organisation declared Hermann Lang the champion.[1] Lang was clearly the dominating driver in that season, which was acknowledged by the international press. In the first two of the four championship events, both Lang and Müller won once while the other failed to complete 75% of the distance. The German round saw Lang retiring early, and Müller finishing 2nd behind Carraciola. This left Müller in the lead in both scoring systems, as published in magazines, with the Swiss round deciding the outcome. Müller finished 4th behind three Mercedes, which gave him the lead in the old point system, while in front, Lang had beaten Carraciola for the lead in the maximum points system.

Contents

Season review

Mercedes-Benz competed with the W154.
The Auto Union D Type.

European Championship Grands Prix

Rd Name Circuit Date Winning drivers Winning constructor Report
1 Belgium Belgian Grand Prix Spa-Francorchamps June 25 Nazi Germany Hermann Lang Mercedes-Benz Report
2 France French Grand Prix Reims-Gueux July 9 Nazi Germany Hermann Paul Müller Auto Union Report
3 Nazi Germany German Grand Prix Nürburgring July 23 Nazi Germany Rudolf Caracciola Mercedes-Benz Report
4 Switzerland Swiss Grand Prix Bremgarten August 20 Nazi Germany Hermann Lang Mercedes-Benz Report

Non-championship Grands Prix

Grandes Épreuves are denoted by a yellow background.

Name Circuit Date Winning driver Winning constructor Report
France Pau Grand Prix Pau April 2 Nazi Germany Hermann Lang Mercedes-Benz Report
United Kingdom Road Championship Brooklands April 10 United Kingdom Arthur Dobson ERA Report
France Paris Cup Montlhéry May 7 France Jean-Pierre Wimille Bugatti Report
Finland Finnish Grand Prix Eläintarharata May 7 Sweden Adolf Westerblom Alfa Romeo Report
Nazi Germany Eifelrennen Nürburgring May 21 Nazi Germany Hermann Lang Mercedes-Benz Report
Belgium Grand Prix des Frontières Chimay May 28 France Maurice Trintignant Bugatti Report
Romania Bucharest Grand Prix Bucharest June 25 Nazi Germany Hans Stuck Auto Union Report
France Remparts Grand Prix Angoulême July 30 France Raymond Sommer Alfa Romeo Report
United Kingdom Campbell Trophy Brooklands August 7 United Kingdom Raymond Mays ERA Report
Kingdom of Yugoslavia Belgrade City Race Belgrade September 3 Italy Tazio Nuvolari Auto Union Report
Brazil Gávea Nacional Circuit Gávea October 29 Brazil Manuel de Teffé Maserati Report

Unofficial Championship Standings

Pos Driver BEL
Belgium
FRA
France
GER
Nazi Germany
SUI
Switzerland
Pts[2]
1 Nazi Germany Hermann Paul Müller Ret 1 2 4 12
2 Nazi Germany Hermann Lang 1 Ret Ret 1 14
3 Nazi Germany Rudolf Caracciola Ret Ret 1 2 17
4 Nazi Germany Manfred von Brauchitsch 3 Ret Ret 3 19
= Italy Tazio Nuvolari Ret Ret Ret 5 19
6 Nazi Germany Rudolf Hasse 2 Ret Ret 20
= France René Dreyfus 7 4 8 20
8 Nazi Germany Georg Meier Ret 2 Ret 22
9 France Raymond Sommer 4 5 Ret 23
= Nazi Germany Hans Stuck 6 Ret 10 23
11 France Robert Mazaud 5 6 24
= France "Raph" 9 5 24
13 Italy Giuseppe Farina Ret 7 25
14 Nazi Germany Paul Pietsch 3 Ret 26
15 France René Le Bègue 3 27
16 France Louis Gérard 6 28
= France Philippe Étancelin 4 28
= Italy Luigi Chinetti 8 28
= Nazi Germany Leonhard Joa 7 28
= Nazi Germany Hans Hartmann 6 28
= Italy Clemente Biondetti 9 28
= United Kingdom Kenneth Evans 11 28
= United Kingdom John Wakefield 12 28
= United Kingdom Robert Ansell 13 28
25 United Kingdom Richard Seaman Ret 29
= Switzerland Adolfo Mandirola Ret DSQ 29
= Switzerland Toulo de Graffenried Ret 29
28 France Yves Matra Ret 30
= Italy Luigi Villoresi Ret 30
30 United Kingdom Raymond Mays Ret 31
= Nazi Germany Heinz Brendel Ret 31
= Italy Giovanni Rocco Ret 31
Pos Driver BEL
Belgium
FRA
France
GER
Nazi Germany
SUI
Switzerland
Pts
Colour Result Points
Gold Winner 1
Silver 2nd place 2
Bronze 3rd place 3
Green Completed more than 75% 4
Blue Completed between 50% and 75% 5
Purple Completed between 25% and 50% 6
Red Completed less than 25% 7
Black Disqualified 8
Blank Did not participate 8

References

Etzrodt, Hans. "Grand Prix Winners 1895–1949 : Part 3 (1934–1949)". The Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing. Archived from the original on 6 August 2007. http://www.kolumbus.fi/leif.snellman/gpw3.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-05. 

Leif Snellman and Hans Etzrodt. "1939". The Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing. Archived from the original on 7 July 2007. http://www.kolumbus.fi/leif.snellman/gp39.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-05. 

Galpin, Darren. "1939 Grands Prix". The GEL Motorsport Information Page. http://www.teamdan.com/archive/gen/1939.html. Retrieved 2007-08-05. 

  1. ^ a b Armstrong, Richard. "Unfinished Symphony: Why the 1939 European Championship was never won". 8W. http://8w.forix.com/ec1939.html. Retrieved 2007-08-05. 
  2. ^ according to the old minimum points system

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