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Jacques Schulz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jacques Schulz
Born
Jacques Arno Schulz

(1967-04-01) 1 April 1967 (age 56)
Heidelberg, West Germany
NationalityGerman
Occupation(s)Commentator
journalist
Years active1993–present
Employer(s)DF1
Sky Deutschland

Jacques Arno Schulz (born 1 April 1967 in Heidelberg, West Germany) is a German sports commentator and journalist who commentated on Formula One in Germany between 1996 and 2012.

Formula One

In 1993, Schulz began his Formula One commentating career by commentating races for Eurosport in Germany, and moved to the German channel DF1 for 1996, pairing with Swiss Formula One driver Marc Surer. His first Formula One commentary was at the 1996 German Grand Prix and his last was the 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix, coinciding with Michael Schumacher's final race. In February 2013, he announced his withdrawal from commentating for personal reasons. He was replaced by Sascha Roos.[1]

After Formula One

Two months later after his withdrawal, he went on to commentate for the German ADAC GT Masters alongside Patrick Simon.

Other sports commentaries

In 2006 and 2007, he commentated live broadcasts of the races of the NASCAR Nextel Cup, which were also shown at Premiere. Experts Klaus Graf and Christian Kuhn were his co-commentators.

In 2008, he also commentated on individual races of the NASCAR Sprint Cup races, as well as on the Formula 1 free weekends, as well as the IndyCar Series. In the winter of 2009/10, he also occasionally commentated ice hockey games for Sky Deutschland.

In 2011, Schulz commentated on the Race of Champions from Düsseldorf on Sat.1.

References

  1. ^ "Schulz geht, Roos kommt: Neuerung im Formel-1-Team von Sky (05.02.2013)".
This page was last edited on 4 March 2024, at 16:22
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