How does Hamilton stack up against Schumacher and F1’s all-time greats?

Formula 1

Lewis Hamilton’s sixth championship has moved him to outright second on the all-time champions list.

It means 2020 could be a record-setting year for the British driver. Here are the key statistics of Hamilton’s career so far, a look at how close he is to claiming some of the most prestigious records in Formula One and how he compares to some of the sport’s all-time greats.

World championship titles

1. Michael Schumacher – 7

2. Lewis Hamilton – 6

3. Juan Manuel Fangio – 5

4. Sebastian Vettel, Alain Prost – 4

5. Jack Brabham, Jackie Strwart, Niki Lauda, Nelson Piquet, Ayrton Senna – 3

Total wins

1. Michael Schumacher – 91

2. Lewis Hamilton – 83

3. Sebastian Vettel – 53

4. Alain Prost – 51

5. Ayrton Senna – 41

Percentages of F1 career races won

1. Juan Manuel Fangio – 52 entries, 24 wins (46.51 percent)

2. Alberto Ascari – 33 entries, 13 wins (39.39 percent)

3. Jim Clark – 73 entries, 25 wins (34.25 percent)

4. Lewis Hamilton – 248 entries, 83 wins (33.47 percent)

5. Michael Schumacher – 308 entries, 91 wins (29.55 percent)

Total races finished in the points

1. Michael Schumacher – 221

2. Kimi Raikkonen – 212

3. Lewis Hamilton – 211

4. Fernando Alonso – 202

5. Sebastian Vettel – 194

Total podium finishes

1. Michael Schumacher – 155

2. Lewis Hamilton – 149

3. Sebastian Vettel – 119

4. Alain Prost – 106

5. Kimi Raikkonen – 103


Hamilton holds one F1 record which looks like it will take some beating…

Pole positions

1. Lewis Hamilton – 87

2. Michael Schumacher – 68

3. Ayrton Senna – 65

4. Sebastian Vettel – 57

5. Jim Clark, Alain Prost – 57

To put that tally into perspective, behind Vettel there is a big gap to the other active drivers on the grid to have claimed a pole position in qualifying.

The current list behind Vettel is: Kimi Raikkonen (18), Valtteri Bottas (11), Charles Leclerc (6), Daniel Ricciardo (3), Robert Kubica, Nico Hulkenberg and Max Verstappen (1). Leclerc has claimed all six of his this season — while that’s impressive, at that rate it would take 13 more seasons to match Hamilton’s current mark.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Opetaia retains belt, beats Nyika in ‘dogfight’
Colorado coaching great McCartney dies at 84
Cowell becomes Aston Martin boss, Krack stays on
A milkshake, missed field goal and chicken tenders all played a part in Bucs’ playoff hopes
Sources: Moyes in line to replace Dyche at Everton

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *