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Lewis Hamilton holds the record for the most race wins in Formula One history, with 105 wins to date. Michael Schumacher, the previous record holder, is second with 91 wins, and Max Verstappen is third with 63 victories. [6] [7] Hamilton also holds the distinction of having the longest time between his first win and his last.
The World Championship of Drivers has been held since 1950.Driver records listed here include all rounds which formed part of the World Championship since 1950: this includes the Indianapolis 500 from 1950–1960 (although it was not run to Formula One rules), and the 1952 and 1953 World Championship Grands Prix (which were run to Formula Two rules).
Season(s) Wins Consecutive races won 1 Red Bull Racing: 2022–2023: 15 2022 Abu Dhabi, 2023 Bahrain, 2023 Saudi Arabian, 2023 Australian, 2023 Azerbaijan, 2023 Miami, 2023 Monaco, 2023 Spanish, 2023 Canadian, 2023 Austrian, 2023 British, 2023 Hungarian, 2023 Belgian, 2023 Dutch, 2023 Italian: 2 McLaren: 1988: 11
Scuderia Ferrari have won the most Formula One Grands Prix. Formula One, abbreviated to F1, is the highest class of open-wheeled auto racing defined by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motorsport's world governing body. [1] The "formula" in the name refers to a set of rules to which all participants and cars must conform.
Overall, Verstappen has won 17 of 20 Formula 1 races ahead of the Las Vegas Grand Prix and has clinched the records for the most wins in a single F1 season and the best winning percentage in any ...
As of the 2024 season, out of the 777 drivers who have started a Formula One Grand Prix, [16] the 75 titles awarded have been won by a total of 34 different drivers. [8] [9] The first Formula One World Drivers' Champion was Giuseppe Farina in the 1950 championship and the current title holder is Max Verstappen in the 2024 season.
Red Bull have won 28 per cent of all the races they’ve entered in Formula One – but how do their numbers stack up compared to the likes of Mercedes, Ferrari, ...
The World Drivers' Championship is awarded to the most successful F1 driver over the course of the season, as determined by a points system based on Grand Prix results, [12] and has been awarded since the first F1 season in 1950. [13] The championship is the successor of the pre-war AIACR European Championship held between 1931 and 1939. [14]