TOP 5 PLAYERS OF CAR RACING
From Lewis Hamilton to
Michael Schumacher, Ayrton Senna to Sebastian Vettel, read the stories of
Formula 1's ten greatest drivers of all-timeAs of 2021, there have been 770 Formula 1 racing drivers. Touring the world racing
for glory in front of millions, week-in, week-out, it’s every driver’s dream to
win a race. A small minority achieve that feat, while fewer drivers will reach
the exclusive World Champion club.
But a tiny minority become legends. Whether
it’s their character off-track, talent in the car, or epic rivalries, a select
number of drivers cement their place in the history books.
Here, you’ll learn about the 10 drivers with
the most wins in Formula 1 history. From Niki Lauda’s 25 victories to Lewis
Hamilton’s 99 (and counting), learn about the greatest drivers to grace the
Formula 1 grid.
Ten greatest Formula 1
drivers in order of number of race wins
Niki Lauda climbs into a Mercedes
W196 Grand Prix car as driven by Juan Manuel Fangio.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
1. Niki Lauda
First race: 1971 Austrian Grand Prix
Championships: 3 (1975, 1977, 1984)
Number of wins: 25
Number of pole positions: 24
Niki Lauda may be at the latter end of this
scale, but he without a doubt one of the most inspirational drivers to grace
the grid. While he came from a wealthy background – as many who could afford to
race cars are – his family didn’t approve of his hobby. He took out a £30,000
loan to buy his way into a Formula 2 team, and it was a gamble that soon paid
off. The following year, he was promoted to F1 and raced for March.
His talent was quickly recognised by a
fledgling Ferrari which was looking to bounce back from a podium-less 1973
season. They put their faith in Lauda’s talent, and he returned the favour.
Taking 2nd place in the opening race, and scoring his maiden
win three races later, Lauda went about establishing himself as one of the
best.
And that’s exactly what he did in 1975, with
his first world championship. With an incredible Ferrari 312, he took the title
with an impressive five wins. In ’76, his rivalry with James Hunt came to the
forefront. Lauda had another incredible start to the season with six wins and
nine podiums in 10 races. But during the German Grand Prix, Lauda suffered
life-threatening injuries that looked almost certain to end his life, let alone
his racing career.
But Lauda bounced back. He missed only two
races and returned to the grid in Italy, where he took 4th. Come the
season’s end, he finished a single point behind title winner Hunt. Lauda went
on to win the championship the following year for good measure.
Lauda’s third championship came a decade after
his Formula 1 debut, as he pipped McLaren teammate Alain Prost to first by half
a point – the finest margin in history. He would stay involved in Formula 1,
and was a key figure in the modern Mercedes Formula 1 team.
Jim Clark celebrates after winning in Belgium.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
2. Jim Clark
First race: 1960 Dutch Grand Prix
Championships: 2 (1963, 1965)
Number of wins: 25
Number of pole positions: 33
Scot Jim Clark was the greatest driver of his
time. He began racing in 1960, having cut his teeth in local rallies and hill
climbs around Scotland. Later, he made his F1 debut for Lotus mid-way through
the 1960 season in Zandvoort at the Dutch Grand Prix. Later
that year, he returned for the Belgian Grand Prix in a race where Chris Bristow and Alan
Stacey lost their lives. Despite finishing fifth, Clark admitted he was driving
“scared stiff” the entire race.
His first drivers’ championship came in a
sensational 1963 season. He won seven of the ten races that year, a win record
that wouldn’t be matched until Alain Prost took seven wins in 1984. His next
championship came in an almost equally dominant 1965 season, in which he won
six of the opening seven races. The only race he didn’t win was the Monaco Grand Prix, because he decided to win the Indianapolis 500
instead.
Clark’s achieved 33 pole positions and 25 race
wins from 72 starts in a quite incredible career. He won the Indy 500, took 3rd place
at Le Mans and even raced in NASCAR in the US. But his career was tragically
cut short when he crashed during a Formula 2 race in Germany in 1968.
Jackie Stewart celebrates winning the 1973 German Grand Prix.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
3. Jackie Stewart
First race: 1965 South African Grand Prix
Championships: 3 (1969, 1971, 1973)
Number of wins: 27
Number of pole positions: 17
Another Scottish legend to take to the Formula
1 grid, Sir Jackie Stewart remains a key figure in the grid. And one that’s
hard to miss, usually kitted out in striking Stewart tartan.
A born racer, Stewart spent his teenage years
watching his father race motorbikes while his older brother Jimmy competed in
the 1953 British
Grand Prix. Jackie would go on
to make his Formula 1 debut in 1965, and his performances were outstanding. As
a rookie, he scored five podiums including a maiden win in Italy, finishing 3rd in
the championship.
When he moved to Matra in 1968, he took a step
up, finishing second in the standings before becoming drivers’ champion the
following year. His move to Tyrell in 1970 also proved fruitful, as he took the
title in his second season with the team scoring six victories.
In his final Formula 1 season, Stewart would
bow out in style. A hard-fought first half of the season in which Stewart and
Emerson Fittipaldi shared the wins in the first six races, Stewart maintained
the form and took the championship.
Upon retiring from the sport, his legacy in
motorsport grew exponentially. Having seen friends in the paddock – including
the aforementioned Clark – lose their lives, he focussed on making racing
safer. He pressed for mandatory seat belts, full-face helmets and led boycotts
of unsafe races. Regardless of his success, motorsport is a better place thanks
to his efforts.
Nigel Mansell celebrates
victory in Hungary in 1992.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
4. Nigel Mansell
First race: 1980 Austrian Grand Prix
Championships: 1 (1992)
Number of wins: 31
Number of pole positions: 32
If there’s one word to sum up Nigel Mansell’s
racing career, it’s ‘determination’. He grew up in Birmingham, UK, the son of
an engineer. While he had success in karting, like many of those to make this
list, his family disapproved of the step into open-wheel Formula racing. While
he enjoyed huge success in the junior ranks, it almost all came to an end when
he broke his neck in an incident at Brands Hatch. Doctors told him he was
dangerously close to losing the use of his limbs, and would never drive again.
Yeah, right. In 1980, Mansell began racing for
Lotus and scored a smattering of podiums. He did produce one of Formula 1’s
most iconic moments. At a sweltering Dallas Grand Prix in 1984, he suffered gearbox
problems and broke down with just a few corners of the final lap remaining. But
in typical unwavering spirit, Mansell jumped out of the cockpit and pushed his
car, eventually collapsing under the Texan sun. But it wasn’t all in vain, as
he caught the eye of Frank Williams.
He enjoyed success with the Oxfordshire-based
team, winning races regularly and dramatically losing the title at the final
race in 1986. With another runner-up season in 1987, he’d turned heads at
Maranello and joined Ferrari.
Mansell wasn’t able to keep up with his former
rival turned teammate Alain Prost with a couple of disappointing seasons. He
announced his retirement from the sport in the 1990 season, but Frank Williams
wasn’t having any of it.
He made Mansell an offer he couldn’t refuse,
and boy was he glad he didn’t. The 1992 seasons saw Mansell make the most
scintillating starts to a campaign, with five straight victories in a row. He
won three of the next five races, and dominated winning the championship by a
huge margin over teammate Ricardo Patrese. He set his sights on America the
following year, joining the IndyCar series, and won the championship. He was
truly a vintage driver who got better with time.
Fernando Alonso after
winning the San Marino Grand Prix.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
5. Fernando Alonso
First race: 2001 Australian Grand Prix
Championships: 2 (2005, 2006)
Number of wins: 32
Number of pole positions: 22
What can you say about Fernando Alonso? A
talented, charismatic driver from the off, Alonso has gone on to be one of the
sport’s elder statesmen.
He started his interest in karting when his
father, an amateur go-karter and mineshaft mechanic, build Fernando and sister
Lorena a go-kart so he had a hobby to share with his children. While Lorena
wasn’t interested, Fernando shined under all circumstances – including racing
in the rain on slick tyres as the family couldn’t afford wet weather
alternatives.
These experiences shaped his early career and
eventually led him to take a seat with Minardi in 2001. After a year bringing
up the rear of the pack, Alonso went on to join Renault and in 2005, he made
history. Breaking Michael Schumacher’s streak of five world championships in a
row, Alonso became the youngest driver to ever win the championship. The next
year, he became the youngest to score back-to-back championships.
While his career had its highs, it also had
its lows. A stint at McLaren saw him struggle to battle rookie Lewis Hamilton
and on three occasions he came within a whisker of winning a third championship
with Ferrari. When he raced for a McLaren team on the downturn in 2015 – 18, it
looked as if his Formula 1 career was going to end unceremoniously.
He left the sport in 2018 and went on to win
Le Mans on two occasions. Then in 2021, Alonso made a shock return to the
sport, at the team he had his greatest successes: Alpine, the team formerly
known as Renault. The greatest moment of his comeback so far came at the
2021 Hungarian
Grand Prix, when holding off a
much faster Lewis Hamilton on fresher tyres allowed teammate Esteban Ocon to
record the re-branded team’s very first win. It’s not over for Alonso just yet.
Ayrton Senna celebrates
winning the 1991 Belgian Grand Prix.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
6. Ayrton Senna
First race: 1984 Brazilian Grand Prix
Championships: (1988, 1990, 1991)
Number of wins: 41
Number of pole positions: 65
Senna was one of the greatest inspirations to
race cars, and the only driver in this list not to hail from a European
country. He was born in Sao Paolo to a wealthy factory owner and excelled when
he began racing go-karts aged 13, usually beating competitors years older than
him. To push for success in motorsport, Senna relocated to England to race in
single-seaters.
After he won the British Formula 3
Championship in 1983, he took the step up to Formula 1 in 1984. He raced a
comparatively uncompetitive Toleman to ninth place in the championship, before
finishing third in ’85 and ’86, registering his first win in Portugal in 1986.
Following a spell at Honda, his greatest
successes came with McLaren where he would form an intense rivalry with
teammate Alain Prost. The pair dominated the 1988 season, both winning all but
one race with Senna the victor. Prost took victory in 1989, courtesy of a
highly controversial crash in the season’s penultimate race, which saw the
Brazilian disqualified.
Prost moved to Ferrari the next year, but both
drivers remained the main protagonists. It once again came down to the
penultimate race in Japan where, yet again, the rivals collided. That meant
Prost couldn’t mathematically win the championship, and Senna was crowned with
his second title. He followed it up with a consecutive championship for
McLaren, the third of his career.
Senna raced with Williams in 1994, but
tragically lost his life in a high-speed crash during the San Marino Grand
Prix. Formula 1 had prematurely lost one of its greats, but he had left a
legacy that would never be forgotten.
Alain Prost celebrates
the 1986 Australian Grand Prix.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
7. Alain Prost
First race: 1980 Argentine Grand Prix
Championships: 4 (1985, 1986, 1989, 1993)
Number of wins: 51
Number of pole positions: 33
Despite registering four World Championships
and more than 50 wins, Alain Prost’s success could have been even greater. His
name has cropped up in the stories of drivers we’ve already told, because Prost
was consistently at the front of the grid.
He began go-karting at aged 14, when he
discovered the sport during a family holiday. His F1 career started at McLaren
in 1980 with a disappointing campaign, but it kicked into life when he signed
for Renault. He took his first few wins in 1981, and finished 4th in
the drivers’ championship in 1982. But his career took a huge step in 1983,
when he pushed Brabham’s Nelson Piquet all the way and finished within two
points of the title win.
In 1984, he battled with Niki Lauda finishing
within half a point of the title. But he got the better of Mansell, Senna and
Piquet in the next two years to become a double-world champion. He then became
embroiled in the ultimate rivalry with Ayrton Senna, taking the title in 1989.
After a two-year stint at Ferrari, Prost moved
to Williams to sign-off from Formula 1 in style. Winning seven of the 16 races
in the 1993 season, he took championship glory before retiring.
Sebastian Vettel
celebrates victory for Ferrari in Belgium in 2018.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
8. Sebastian Vettel
First race: 2007 United States Grand Prix
Championships: 4 (2010, 2011, 2012, 2013)
Number of wins: 53
Number of pole positions: 57
Sebastian Vettel began his karting career aged
eight, and was impressed enough to be promoted to the Red Bull Junior Tea aged
11. He made his debut in 2007 as a stand-in for Robert Kubica after his
massive Canadian
Grand Prix crash midway through
the season. After a fine eight-place finish, he was brought into the Toro Rosso
team to replace Scott Speed, and narrowly missed out on a historic podium at
the Chinese Grand Prix.
But history beckoned for the young German. At
the Italian Grand Prix, aged 21 years and 74 days, Vettel became the
youngest driver to take pole position after a wet qualifying session. He backed
this up with an unbelievable maiden win, becoming the youngest driver to win a
Formula 1 Grand Prix.
He was quickly fast-tracked to the senior Red
Bull Racing team, finishing runner-up to Brawn GP’s Jenson Button in 2009. But
Red Bull dominated come the turn of the decade, and Vettel pushed the team to
four consecutive championships. His drivers’ titles didn’t come without
struggle, however. Seb had an infamously difficult relationship with teammate
Mark Webber, but Vettel’s results spoke for themselves.
After the move to hybrid cars, Vettel moved to
Ferrari in 2015 and enjoyed a few title battles with Lewis Hamilton, but the
Mercedes proved too powerful throughout the turbo-hybrid era.
Vettel recently moved to the newly-branded
Aston Martin F1 team, recording the team’s first podium in Azerbaijan in 2021,
and narrowly missing out on a second at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Michael Schumacher
celebrates his third championship and his first with Ferrari.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
9. Michael Schumacher
First race: 1991 Belgian Grand Prix
Championships: 7 (1994, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)
Number of wins: 91
Number of pole positions: 68
A racer who some thought would never be
surpassed. For many, he will remain the greatest to ever drive a racing car.
Michael Schumacher had everything to make him the perfect racer: speed, focus,
bravery, judgement, character and arrogance.
His F1 career began when Eddie Jordan handed
him an opportunity at the 1991 Belgian Grand Prix, after Bertrand Gachot was sentenced to two months in prison
for assaulting a taxi driver. He raced the remainder of the season with
Benetton, who he began to gain traction with throughout the early 1990s.
Schumacher took his first World Championship
with Benetton in 1994, pipping Williams’ Damon Hill by one point to his first
title. The pair battled it out again the following year, with Schumacher taking
his second title. (Hill did manage to win his only title in 1996.)
Schumacher didn’t come without his
controversies. He was disqualified from the entire 1997 season when he
attempted to knock Jacques Villeneuve off the circuit at the final race of the
season, leaving him the champion. But the move backfired. Schumacher’s car was
damaged, and Villeneuve went on to finish in the points.
The German’s storming success came at the turn
of the millennium. Ferrari produced cars that were head and shoulders ahead of
the rest of the field, and Schumacher was the man who knew how to extract every
ounce of performance. Perhaps his best-ever season was his final season in
2004, when he won 12 of the first 13 Grands Prix, the exception being a
retirement in Monaco.
He retired in 2006, but shook the racing world
when he returned to the grid in 2010 with Mercedes. He was rarely at the front
of the pack, but enjoyed his racing as much as ever, recording his final podium
at the European Grand Prix in 2012. The Schumacher legacy continues in Formula
1, with son Mick making his debut for the Haas F1 team in 2021.
Lewis Hamilton
celebrating victory at the 2021 British Grand Prix.
Copyright: Motorsport Images
10.
Lewis
Hamilton
First race: 2007 Australian Grand Prix
Championships: 7 (2008, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020)
Number of wins: 99
Number of pole positions: 101
There were records some thought would never be
broken. But then, Lewis Hamilton hit the scene.
Before he went into karting, Hamilton raced
remote controlled cars, beating adults to championships when he was just a kid.
He carried that success into karting and – where some successful young drivers
are hit with a dose of reality when they reach the highest levels of sport,
Hamilton continued to dominate.
In just his first season with McLaren, he lost
to eventual champion Kimi Raikkonen by a single point. He made amends in 2008
with his first World Championship, but only just. A tightly contested battle
with Felipe Massa culminated at the final race in Interlagos for the
Brazilian’s home race. When Massa crossed the line and ended his season, he was
at the top of the championship standings. But Hamilton was gifted the
championship by a point when Timo Glock’s car slowed on the final tour of the
circuit. Up there with Sergio Aguero’s final-minute goal to seal Manchester
City’s Premiership in 2012, this is up there with the greatest last-gasp title
wins ever.
The years that followed were relatively anonymous
for Hamilton, but his career stepped up a gear when the regulations changed in
2014. Mercedes mastered the turbo-hybrid regs, and no other team has won a
championship throughout this period in history. Hamilton seemingly always had
the better of his teammate Nico Rosberg, until their rivalry erupted in 2016.
Rosberg took the title at the final race, before retiring from the sport
altogether.
That opened the door for Hamilton’s dominance
to flourish. He’s won every title since, has become the only driver to record
over 100 pole positions, and is nearing the same triple-figure feat in race
wins.
He’s showing no sign of slowing down, and with
his latest battle with Max Verstappen reaching fever pitch, the legacy
continues to be written.
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