Carlo Maria Pintacuda
Italian racing driver (1900–1971)
Carlo Maria Pintacuda (18 September 1900 – 8 March 1971) was a motor-racing driver from Italy.
Pintacuda was born in Florence on 18 September 1900. He was one of the greatest drivers from the "Florentine School" alongside Emilio Materassi, Gastone Brilli-Peri, Clemente Biondetti and Giulio Masetti, and won two editions of Mille Miglia races, in 1935 and 1937. After retiring from racing he lived in Argentina where he opened a grocery store.
He died in Buenos Aires on 8 March 1971.[1]
References
- ^ Carlo Pintacuda at grandprixhistory.org, last accessed on 8 October 2019
- v
- t
- e
Spa 24 Hours winners
- Jean-Michel Martin
- Thierry Tassin
- Michael Bartels
- Pierre Dieudonné
- Marc Duez
- Philipp Eng
- Hans Heyer
- Attilio Marinoni
- Dieter Quester
- Roberto Ravaglia
- Andrea Bertolini
- Christophe Bouchut
- Frédéric Bouvy
- Alexander Burgstaller
- Luigi Chinetti
- Romain Dumas
- Fabrizio Gollin
- Jules Gounon
- Armin Hahne
- Altfrid Heger
- Mike Hezemans
- Eddy Joosen
- Helmut Kelleners
- Philippe Martin
- Kurt Mollekens
- Win Percy
- René Rast
- Timo Scheider
- Bernd Schneider
- Francesco Severi
- Steve Soper
- Laurens Vanthoor
- Tom Walkinshaw
- Markus Winkelhock
- Jean Xhenceval
- Uwe Alzen
- Jean-Claude Andruet
- Claude Ballot-Lena
- Earl Bamber
- Maurice Becquet
- Anthony Beltoise
- Jean-Philippe Belloc
- Robert Benoist
- Gerhard Berger
- Jörg Bergmeister
- Tom Blomqvist
- André Boillot
- Sébastien Bourdais
- David Brabham
- Gianfranco Brancatelli
- Antonio Brivio
- Lilian Bryner
- Maximilian Buhk
- Nicolas Caerels
- Enzo Calderari
- Luca Cappellari
- Nick Catsburg
- Johnny Cecotto
- Guy Chasseuil
- Louis Chiron
- Michael Christensen
- Emmanuel Collard
- Robert Crevits
- Alain Cudini
- Christian Danner
- Hughes de Fierlandt
- Didier Defourny
- Jean-Denis Délétraz
- Nico Demuth
- Didier de Radiguès
- Jean Desvignes
- Jean-Marie Detrin
- Mattia Drudi
- Mattias Ekström
- Kévin Estre
- Marcel Fässler
- Giuseppe Farina
- Christian Fittipaldi
- Greg Franchi
- Jean-Pierre Gaban
- Pietro Ghersi
- Fabien Giroix
- Dieter Glemser
- Maximilian Götz
- Gustave Gosselin
- Christopher Haase
- Hubert Hahne
- Naoki Hattori
- Mike Hawthorn
- Éric Hélary
- Wolf Henzler
- Toine Hezemans
- St. John Horsfall
- Günther Huber
- Jacky Ickx
- Pascal Ickx
- Boris Ivanowski
- Jean-Pierre Jarier
- Leslie Johnson
- Dimitri Jorjadze
- Daniel Juncadella
- Willi Kauhsen
- Peter Kox
- Erwin Kremer
- Christian Krognes
- Anthony Kumpen
- André Lagache
- Gérard Langlois van Ophem
- Côme Ledogar
- René Léonard
- Marc Lieb
- Richard Lietz
- Jean Lucas
- Lucas Luhr
- Norbert Mahé
- Raffaele Marciello
- Maxime Martin
- Jochen Mass
- Jos Menten
- Jörg Müller
- Nicklas Nielsen
- Markus Östreich
- Anders Olofsson
- Stéphane Ortelli
- Markus Palttala
- Alain Peltier
- Andrea Piccini
- Alessandro Pier Guidi
- Teddy Pilette
- Carlo Pintacuda
- Martin Ragginger
- Louis Rigal
- Stéphane Sarrazin
- Robert Sénéchal
- Eugenio Siena
- Alexander Sims
- Àlex Soler-Roig
- Raymond Sommer
- Marco Sørensen
- Gordon Spice
- Henri Springuel
- Frank Stippler
- Hans-Joachim Stuck
- Marc Surer
- Nick Tandy
- David Terrien
- Didier Theys
- Nicki Thiim
- Noël van Assche
- Charles van Stalle
- Vincent Vosse
- Joachim Winkelhock
- Marco Wittmann
- Nick Yelloly
- Goffredo Zehender
This biographical article related to Italian auto racing is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e