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Marko Happich

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Marko Happich
NationalityGerman
Born1971 (age 52–53)
WebsiteOfficial website
Motorcycle racing career statistics
Sidecarcross World Championship
Active years1996 - 2012
ManufacturersMTH-EML (1996–2000)
Zabel-VMC (2001–2007)
Zabel-MEFO (2008–2010)
Zabel-VMC (2011–2012)
Championshipsnone
2012 championship position18
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
293 4 41 3,449

Marko Happich (born 1971)[1] is a German former sidecarcross rider. Internationally, his greatest success was a runners-up finish in the Sidecarcross World Championship, achieved in 2004, while domestically he has won six national German Sidecarcross Championships.

After twenty years in the sidecarcross sport Happich retired at the end of the 2012 season.[2]

Racing career

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German Championship

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Happich first entered the German national championship in 1994 with passenger Peer Kasseckert, also winning the German sidecarcross cup, a second-string competition, in 1994. Happich soon achieved top-ten finishes and won his first national championship in 2001, with Sebastian Böhme as his passenger.[3][4]

For the next decade Happich became one of the dominant drivers in the national championship, winning titles in 2001, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2009 while finishing runners-up in 2002, 2007, 2010 and 2011. In the last two instances Happich missed out on the national title by just one point. He had his most dominant season in 2004 when he, with Thomas Weinmann as his passenger who himself had already won five German titles alongside his brother Klaus, won 14 out of 16 season races in the competition. Apart from Böhme (2001) and Weinmann (2004) Happich won his other four titles with Gertain Wijs (2003), Meinrad Schelbert (2006, 2008) and Martin Betschart (2009) as his passengers. From 2007 onwards the national German championship became an international one, allowing non-German riders to win it and increasing competition, resulting in Swiss rider Andy Bürgler finishing ahead of runners-up Happich that season.[5] He officially retired from all competition at the end of the 2012 season.[3][4]

Happich made an on-off return to the German Championship in 2014, racing in Geisleden in May 2014, coming fourth in the first race but suffering a flat tire in the second.[6]

World Championship

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Entering the Sidecarcross World Championship from 1996, Happich slowly improved in the competition over the years and earned his first top-ten finish in 2000. For the next ten seasons, from 2000 to 2009 Happich finished in the top-ten every year, culminating in a second place in 2004 as his best-ever result. He also won two Grand Prix that season, in Croatia and Latvia, but never truly challenged for the World Championship, finishing 153 points behind eventual winners Daniel Willemsen and Kaspars Stupelis.[7][8]

Happich once more finished in the top-three in 2006, now in third place and managed to win a third and final Grand Prix in Belgium 2009. His final three seasons in the competition were less successful, coming fifteenth, eighth and eighteenth and taking out his last race win in Rudersberg, Germany, in 2010.[9]

He announced his intention to retire at the end of 2012 before the start of the new season, citing his amateur status when the top riders were all professionals, his age and the difficulty to raise a six-digit budget each season through sponsors as his reasons.[10] His final season was affected by a shoulder injury, missing a number of mid-season Grand Prix but returning in time for the last event of the season.[7][8][11]

Private life

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Happich lives in Großwilsdorf, near Naumburg, where he works as a swim instructor at a local pool. He is a member of the local motocross club MSC Teutschenthal, based in Teutschenthal.[1]

In 2006 he lost a downhill race against Austrian skier Stephan Eberharter at Obertauern as part of the German television show Wetten, dass..?, the race being broadcast live on television. Eberharter skied down while Happich raced down in his sidecarcross, losing by just under one second.[1][12]

Season by season

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The season by season results in the World Championship for Marko Happich:[7][8]

Season Passenger Equipment Position Points Races Wins Second Third
1996 Peer Kasseckert MTH-EML 47 1 1
1997 Beat Meyer MTH-EML 26 17 5
1998 Beat Meyer MTH-EML 16 62 16
1999 Sebastian Böhme MTH-EML 17 61 16
2000 Sebastian Böhme
Tobias Sylwan
MTH-EML 10 107 14
2001 Sebastian Böhme Zabel-VMC 9 170 19
2002 Sebastian Böhme
Gertain Wijs
Zabel-VMC 5 343 26
2003 Gertain Wijs Zabel-VMC 7 301 22 2
2004 Thomas Weinmann Zabel-VMC 2 419 23 1 8 6
2005 Meinrat Schelbert
Sandro Michelotto
Zabel-VMC 5 274 18 5
2006 Meinrat Schelbert
Mark Watson
Zabel-VMC 3 243 14 1 1 2
2007 Meinrat Schelbert Zabel-VMC 7 180 16 1 1
2008 Meinrat Schelbert Zabel-MEFO 5 317 24 1 3
2009 Martin Betschart Zabel-MEFO 4 377 24 1 3 1
2010 Martin Betschart Zabel-MEFO 15 177 19 1 1
2011 Meinrat Schelbert Zabel-VMC 8 317 26 2
2012 Martin Betschart Zabel-VMC 18 83 10
Overall 1996 – 2012 3,449 293 4 14 23

Key

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1 World Champions
2 Runners-up
3 Third placed
4 – 10 Driver finished fourth to tenth

Honours

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Marko Happich im Interview (in German) MSC Teutschenthal website, published: 15 May 2012, accessed: 7 November 2014
  2. ^ Mit Vollgas in die Motocross-Rente (in German) Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, published: 20 November 2012, accessed: 7 November 2014
  3. ^ a b SIDECAR CROSS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GERMANY The John Davey Pages, accessed: 7 November 2014
  4. ^ a b Statistik/ Hall Of Fame (in German) www.sidecarcross.de, accessed: 7 November 2014
  5. ^ Happich zweimal vorn, aber Schweizer jubeln (in German) Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, published: 10 September 2007, accessed: 7 November 2014
  6. ^ Gespann-DM: Wiedersehen mit Marko Happich (in German) speedweek.com, published: 12 May 2014, accessed: 7 November 2014
  7. ^ a b c Official World Championship classification 2000–present FIM website, accessed: 17 November 2014
  8. ^ a b c MARKO HAPPICH GP RECORD The John Davey Pages, accessed: 7 November 2014
  9. ^ Happich fährt im WM-Finale sogar noch aufs Podest (in German) Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, published: 14 September 2010, accessed: 7 November 2014
  10. ^ Auf Abschiedstour (in German) Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, published: 9 March 2012, accessed: 7 November 2014
  11. ^ Vorzeitiges Karriere-Ende? (in German) Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, published: 5 July 2012, accessed: 7 November 2014
  12. ^ Mit 100 Sachen über die Piste (in German) Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, published: 29 January 2006, accessed: 7 November 2014
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Sporting positions
Preceded by
Klaus Weinmann
German national sidecarcross champion
2001
Succeeded by
Klaus Weinmann
Preceded by
Klaus Weinmann
German national sidecarcross champion
2003–2004
Succeeded by
Josef Brustmann
Preceded by
Josef Brustmann
German national sidecarcross champion
2006
Succeeded by
Andy Bürgler
Preceded by
Andy Bürgler
German national sidecarcross champion
2008–2009
Succeeded by
Peter Steegmanns