- Daniël Willemsen
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Daniël Willemsen Nationality Netherlands Born Lochem, Netherlands Bike number 1 Website Team Willemsen website Motorcycle racing career statistics Sidecarcross World Championship Active years 1994 - present Manufacturers Honda-EML (1994-1995)
Zabel-EML (1996)
Zabel-BSU (1997-2001)
Zabel-VMC (2002-2009)
Zabel-WSP (2010-present)Championships (9) 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011 2011 Championship position 1st Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points 354 181 269 6,477 Daniël Johan Nico Willemsen (born 7 May 1975 in Lochem, Gelderland) is a Dutch sidecarcross rider and eight times World Champion.
Willemsen is the most successful rider in sidecarcross history, winning the title nine times, in 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011. He has also won the Dutch national sidecarcross championship nine times, winning it last in 2008 and the Belgian championship twice.
For his success in motor sport he was made a member of the Order of Orange-Nassau in 2005. His home town Lochem also has named a street after him in 2005.
In 2007, he took part in the Dakar Rally, finishing tenth in the solo motorcycle class. To make up for the canceled Dakar Rally 2008, he took part in the Tuareq Rally in March/April 2008, winning the race.
Contents
Biography
Willemsen's sidecar experience started in 1981, when he and his brother Marcel, aged six and four, drove in a home-made Hond 50 cc side car, under the guidance of their father Berry, who had also been a sidecar racer. However, it took the brothers another ten years before they were allowed to take part in sidecar races.[1]
The two brothers entered the senior Dutch championship in 1994, but were barred from racing together in the World Championship because Marcel was not yet 18 years old and Daniël had to find a different passenger instead. Marcel joined his brother in this competition 1995, when he was finally old enough.[1] After teaming up with his brother in 1995, who later became a world championship rider in his own right, his track record started to improve. The two brothers won their first race on 12 May 1996 when they won race two in Baugé, France.
After finishing third in 1997, suffering a bad accident at the German GP,[1] and second in 1998, the two won their first world championship in 1999, taking it out by one point and beating the then current champions Kristers Sergis / Artis Rasmanis.
In February 2000, the two brothers had a serious accident in a training run in Italy, which saw Marcel temporarily parallised and unable to continue his career.[1] In his stead, for the next two seasons, Sven Verbrugge from Belgium became Daniël's partner and the two finished second in the overall standing in 2000 and 2001. 2002 saw a repeat of this result, now with Alfons Eggers as his passenger. With Kaspars Stupelis from Latvia as his partner, he won the 2003 and 2004 world championship. Sven Verbrugge returned for the 2005 and 2006 season and they took out two more world championships together. In 2007, the Swiss Reto Grütter was Daniël's partner and with him he won his record sixth title. In the 2008 season, Willemsen again raced with Reto Grütter as his partner. An injury prevented Grütter from taking part in the first race of the season and Willemsen replaced him with Bruno Kaelin for the first round. In race fourteen of the season, the team was disqualified after winning the race due to Grütter losing a glove, after a protest by Kristers Sergis.[2] The duo won the 2008 championship convincingly, with a 97 point gap to the second-placed Kristers Sergis.
For the 2009 World Championship, Willemsen was teaming up in the first GP with Belgian passenger Dagwin Sabbe, continuing his habit of changing passengers at regular interval. From the second event onwards, he used veteran passenger Sven Verbrugge once more. On 5 July 2009, Willemsen broke his collar bone in a Dutch championship race, ruling him out of racing in a decisive phase of the world championship, just before the end of a summer break in the competition.[3] The duo missed the three following events, thereby losing the leadership in the competition. Upon return, the team could not achieve the same dominance as before Willemsen's injury and finished only fifth in the overall standings, having to let the Belgian-Latvian team of Joris Hendrickx and Kaspars Liepiņš take out the championship. In the last event of the season, Verbrugge broke his thumb and the team was unable to score any points. Daniël Willemsen however declared already before the race that he would try to win title number eight in 2010,[4] which he successfully did.
In 2011, Willemsen started once more with 43-year old Sven Verbrugge as his passenger, after an injury to first-choice passenger Roman Vasyliaka. It is the fifth time that Willemsen and Verbrugge are racing together in the competition.[5] Willemsen temporarily switched to Ondrej Cermak as his passenger for the first of two German GP's because of an injury to Verbrugge. Willemsen and his passenger clinched the World Championship at the second-last race of the season, at Slagelse, Denmark, having a 53 point lead over Latvians Janis and Lauris Daiders at the time.[6][7]
Willemsen already announced that he would aim for title number ten in 2012.[7] The last race event of the 2011 season saw the World Champions, Willemsen and Verbrugge, failing to score any points. A dispute during qualifying between the two lead to Verbrugge walking out during the first qualifying sesion. He later returned to take part in the "last chance", where the team qualified for the race after all. Verbrugge however was injured during a fall and had to be taken to hospital where his arm was placed into a plaster, ruling the team out of the race.[8]
Season by season
In some seasons Daniël Willemsen used multiple passengers throughout the year:
Season Passenger Equipment Position Points Races Wins Second Third 1994 Reiner Stuyvenberg Honda-EML 23 30 2 — 1 — 1995 Bruno Bouvet Honda-EML 25 8 2 — — — Christian Verhagen 4 2 — — — Marcel Willemsen 10 2 — — — 1996 Marcel Willemsen Zabel-EML 12 82 16 2 — — 1997 Marcel Willemsen Zabel-BSU 3 231 14 5 4 2 Sven Verbrugge 40 2 2 — — 1998 Marcel Willemsen Zabel-BSU 2 279 18 6 7 2 1999 Marcel Willemsen Zabel-BSU 1 386 24 13 5 1 2000 Sven Verbrugge Zabel-BSU 2 320 22 5 4 7 2001 Sven Verbrugge Zabel-BSU 2 377 22 8 5 3 Premsyl Novotny 50 2 2 — — 2002 Alfons Eggers Zabel-VMC 2 145 8 1 5 — Sven Verbrugge 88 4 — 4 — Bart Notten 86 4 — 3 1 Dagwin Sabbe 199 12 1 5 1 2003 Kaspars Stupelis Zabel-VMC 1 561 24 13 9 — 2004 Kaspars Stupelis Zabel-VMC 1 572 26 18 4 1 2005 Sven Verbrugge Zabel-VMC 1 478 22 15 4 — 2006 Sven Verbrugge Zabel-VMC 1 341 16 13 — — 2007 Reto Grütter Zabel-VMC 1 375 16 15 — — 2008 Bruno Kaelin Zabel-VMC 1 36 2 — — 1 Reto Grütter 495 22 19 — 1 2009 Dagwin Sabbe Zabel-VMC 5 25 2 1 — — Sven Verbrugge 341 17 11 — — 2010 Gertie Eggink Zabel-WSP 1 481 24 14 1 3 Dagwin Sabbe 75 4 1 1 2011 Sven Verbrugge Zabel-WSP 1 437 21 14 3 — Ondrej Cermak 50 2 2 — — Overall 1994 - 2011 6,477 354 181 65 23 Source:"The John Davey Pages - DANIEL WILLEMSEN". John Davey. http://www.thejohndaveypages.org/CV/XXX/CV_XXX_D_Willemsen_D.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-04.
- Passengers in italics.
Rallies
Year Rally Team Number Equipment Position 2007 Dakar-rally Yamaha Holland Team 233 Yamaha WR 450F 48th 2008 Dakar-rally Yamaha Holland Team 47 Yamaha WR 450F race canceled Touareg-rally Rally Team Touareg Rally 2008 75 Yamaha WR 450F 1st 2009 Dakar-rally Yamaha Holland Team 47 Yamaha WR 450F 21st Honours
World Championship
- Champions: (9) 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011
- Runners-up: (4) 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002
Netherlands
- Champions: (9) 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008
- Runners-up: (2) 1997, 2005
Belgium
- Champions: (2) 2006, 2007
References
- ^ a b c d History Team Willemsen website, accessed: 4 April 2011
- ^ Team Willemsen website - No points in second heat GP Germanie?! (in Dutch) accessed: 5 August 2008
- ^ Team Willemsen website (Dutch) De Telegraaf article from 6 July 2009, accessed: 14 July 2009
- ^ Rudersberg schreibt Geschichte (German), Race report for the last event in 2009, accessed: 25 September 2009
- ^ Seitenwagen: Willemsen mit Verbrugge (German) Speedweek, published: 24 March 2011, accessed: 3 April 2011
- ^ Sven Verbrugge samen met Nederlander wereldkampioen zijspancrossen De Morgen, published: 4 September 2011, accessed: 6 September 2011
- ^ a b Willemsen/Verbrugge wereldkampioen De Stentor, published: 4 September 2011, accessed: 6 September 2011
- ^ Janis und Lauris Daiders beenden die WM in Rudersberg mit GP-Sieg (German) www.offroad7.de, published: 12 September 2011, accessed: 15 September 2011
External links
Sporting positions Preceded by
Kristers SerģisSidecarcross World Champion
1999Succeeded by
Kristers SerģisPreceded by
Kristers SerģisSidecarcross World Champion
2003 - 2008Succeeded by
Joris HendrickxPreceded by
Joris HendrickxSidecarcross World Champion
2010–presentIncumbent Preceded by
Jacky JanssenDutch national sidecarcross champion
1998, 1999Succeeded by
Jacky JanssenPreceded by
Jacky JanssenDutch national sidecarcross champion
2001 - 2004Succeeded by
Eric SchrijverPreceded by
Eric SchrijverDutch national sidecarcross champion
2006 - 2008Succeeded by
Peter SteegmansPreceded by
Jan GoethalsBelgian national sidecarcross champion
2006 - 2007Succeeded by
Joris HendrickxSidecarcross World Champions 1980 Böhler - Müller
1981 van Heugten - Kiggen
1982 Bollhalder - Büsser
1983 Bollhalder - Büsser
1984 Bächtold - Fuß
1985 Bächtold - Fuß
1986 Bächtold - Fuß
1987 Bächtold - Fuß
1988 C. Hüsser - A. Hüsser
1989 C. Hüsser - A. Hüsser1990 Janssen - Janssen
1991 Timmermans - Verhagen
1992 Timmermans - Verhagen
1993 Fuhrer - Käser
1994 Fuhrer - Käser
1995 Fuhrer - Käser
1996 Fuhrer - Käser
1997 Serģis - Rasmanis
1998 Serģis - Rasmanis
1999 D. Willemsen - M. Willemsen2010 D. Willemsen - Eggink
2011 D. Willemsen - VerbruggeRelated articles: Records and statisticsCategories:- 1975 births
- Living people
- People from Lochem
- Dutch sidecarcross riders
- Recipients of the Order of Orange-Nassau
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