The job of managing a Formula One team has presented him with many new and varied tasks. He sought out these challenges and set up the BMW Sauber F1 Team. For all his down-to-earth leadership style, he has also long been what is described in the paddock as a passionate racer.
He jokingly describes the political dimension of his job as follows: "Running a Formula One team is a bit like juggling a lot of balls with one foot on Bernie Ecclestone's shoulder and the other on Max Mosley's while both are involved in a heated discussion."
His technical interest in engine construction and his professional as well as private enthusiasm for motor sport accompanied him through his mechanical engineering studies and subsequently took him straight to BMW. He has been working for the company since 1977, when he started out in the engine calculation department. Later he took on managerial responsibilities.
In 1999 the blend of his various passions for sport, engineering and complex management tasks led to his dream career: since April of that year he has been BMW Motorsport Director, initially heading the group's motorsport involvement jointly with Gerhard Berger. For Mario Theissen, BMW's victory in the 1999 Le Mans 24 Hours against one of the strongest fields in the history of this marathon event will remain unforgettable. Since October 2003 he has been BMW's sole Motorsport Director.
With a doctorate in mechanical engineering and an honorary professorship, Theissen is responsible for all of BMW's motor sport projects on four wheels. Apart from the Formula BMW series, these include the involvement in the FIA World Touring Car Championship - and the first BMW-run Formula One team in company history.
He got this project up and running without any illusions, but with a clear-cut structure and a two-year development plan. Two locations - Munich and Hinwil - present no obstacle for him. The BMW Group operates manufacturing sites and think tanks around the globe.
Theissen's talent for location management is reflected not only in his day-to-day profession - he has an office in Munich and one in Hinwil. His children have been able to spend part of their education abroad, and with his wife Ulrike he makes the most of what Munich has to offer. And from time to time he is drawn to his old home in the countryside. Mario Theissen grew up in Monschau in the Eifel: "The people there are rough as the climate, but warmhearted, dependable and straight as a die," he says. For all the curiosity he takes with him to the big cities of the world, his heart remains in his home town. Monschau lies not only in a picturesque setting but halfway between the Nürburgring and Spa. Both these tradition-steeped circuits were always favourite excursion destinations for him.
At the age of 13 he bought his first car: a Fiat 500, for which he paid a hundred marks. It was mainly used for test purposes before being replaced by a road-legal car when he came of age. These days he has no time to tinker with cars any more as his free time has been radically pared down. It used to be sufficient to allow him to train for a marathon; nowadays he just about salvages enough for a long morning run or to go to the fitness centre that was built for the BMW Motorsport staff on his initiative.
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Mario Theissen.
| Born: | 17th August 1952, Monschau/Eifel (DE) |
| Nationality: | German |
| Marital status: | Married to Ulrike, one son and two daughters |
| Residence: | Munich (DE) |
| Hobbies: | Sport, especially running, cycling and skiing |
| 1971-1977 | Engineering degree at the Aachen University of Technology, diploma in engineering |
| June 1977 | First BMW job in the engine calculation department |
| 1989 | Doctorate at the Ruhr University in Bochum |
| 1991 | Director of Product Concepts at BMW AG |
| 1992 | Director Advance Drivetrain Development at BMW |
| 1994 | Managing Director of BMW Technik GmbH |
| 1998 | Head of Technik GmbH and responsible for setting up the BMW Technology Office in Palo Alto, California (USA) |
| 1st April 1999 | Appointed BMW Motorsport Director alongside his colleague Gerhard Berger |
| From October 2003 | Sole BMW Motorsport Director after Berger's departure |
| July 2005 | Honorary Professorship for Innovative Vehicle Development in the Mechanical Engineering/Process Engineering faculty of the University of Applied Sciences in Dresden |
| From January 2006 | As BMW Motorsport Director, now also responsible for the BMW Sauber F1 Team |
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