German Motor Sport Federation

German Motor Sport Federation
(Deutscher Motor Sport Bund)
SportAuto Racing
CategoryVarious discipline of motorsport
Jurisdiction Germany
 Europe
Founded1947
AffiliationFIA and FIM
Affiliation date2003
HeadquartersFrankfurt, Germany
PresidentHans-Joachim Stuck
Official website
www.dmsb.de

The German Motor Sport Federation[1][2] (German: Deutscher Motor Sport Bund or DMSB, formerly known as Oberste Nationale Sportbehörde or ONS) is Germany's motor racing governing body. It represents Germany at FIA and FIM.

The DMSB-Staffel, founded in 1972 by Herbert Linge as ONS-Staffel, is considered the first mobile track marshaling crew, equipped with fast cars like Porsche 914 or Porsche 911, carrying fire extinguishers and doctors in order to arrive quickly at a crash site.

Member clubs

Racing series organized by DMSB

ITR e.V.

Motorsport Team Germany

The Motorsport Team Germany is a squad containing young up-and-coming German talents in car racing, rallying and motorcycling.[3]

Current members

Driver Discipline
Oliver Goethe Formula racing
Tom Kalender Formula racing
Montego Maassen Formula racing
Mathilda Paatz Formula racing
Tim Tramnitz Formula racing
Daniel Gregor GT racing
Laurin Heinrich GT racing
Max Hesse GT racing
Theo Oeverhaus GT racing
Simon Connor Primm GT racing
Phil Colin Strenge Karting
Elias Luis Weiss Karting
Valentino Catalano LMP
Samuel Drews Rallying
Timo Schulz Rallying
Fabio Schwarz Rallying
Norick Blödorn Motorcycle speedway
Patrick Hyjek Motorcycle speedway
Janek Konzack Motorcycle speedway
Luca Fischeder Enduro
Fynn Hannemann Enduro
Felix Melnikoff Enduro
Milan Schmüser Enduro
Maximilian Wills Enduro
Jonathan Frank Motocross
Simon Längenfelder Motocross
Alexandra Massury Motocross
Maximilian Spies Motocross
Maximilian Werner Motocross
Fynn Kratochwil Motorcycle Road Racing
Rocco Sessler Motorcycle Road Racing
Anina Urlaß Motorcycle Road Racing
Thias Wenzel Motorcycle Road Racing
Johannes Heidel Trial
Fabio Sacht Trial
Source:[4]

References

  1. ^ "2015 Rally Supplementary Regulations" (PDF). rallye-sulingen.de. German Motor Sport Federation (DMSB). Retrieved 2024-09-05.
  2. ^ "2016 Rallye Supplementary Regulations" (PDF). thueringen-rallye.com. German Motor Sport Federation (DMSB). Retrieved 2024-09-05.
  3. ^ "2022 werden 24 Fahrer aus zehn Disziplinen unterstützt". lennox-lehmann.com (in German). 2022-02-13. Retrieved 2022-10-03.
  4. ^ "Motorsport Team Germany präsentiert Förderkader". dmsb.de (in German). 2024-01-16. Retrieved 2024-01-20.