The impressive F1 records Michael Schumacher still holds in 2023

Most titles
Michael S🐽chumacher holds the record for the most number of F1 drivers’ titles - seven.
Schumacher won his fir🅠st two titles with Benetton in 1994 and 1995.
He had to wait u꧂ntil 2000 with Ferrari to win his third, before winning four more in a row to achieve seven in 2004.
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Lewis Hamilton equaled that record in 2020, also winning four consecutiveꦿ titles.
Hamilton looked set to break Schumacher’s tally and move one clear in 2021, but lost out🌃 on the final lap of the season in controversial circumstances to Max Verstappen.
Consecutive seasons with an F1 win
Another record Schumacher holds is for consecutiv💝e seasonsꦆ with an F1 victory.
From 1992 to 2006, 🏅Schumacher won at least one race in every season.
Remarkably, the only seaꦬsons he failed to register a grand prix win in was 1991 - he only raced in six r🧸aces that year, and his three-year stint with Mercedes in 2010 to 2012.
Hamilton has also won in 15 consecutive sea﷽sons - 2007 to 2021.
100% podium rate in a season
Schumacher is the only🎀 driver in F1 h🌞istory to have a 100 percent podium finishing rate in a single season.
T🅠his came in 2022, when he finished in the top three in each🐲 of the 17 races that year.
Jim Clark managed nine podiums in 10 races back in 1963, while both Hamilton and 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Sebastian Vettel finished✅ on the rostrum 17 times in 19 race🌜s in 2015 and 2011 respectively.
Fastest laps in a year
Schumacher scored 10 fastest laps during his dominant title-winning campaign🐎 in 2004 - which is a record.
Kimi Raikkonen did the same in 2005 and 2008.
Most wins at one grand prix
Schumacher won the Fren๊ch Grand Prix on eigh✅t occasions at Magny-Cours.
Hamilton also h🎐as eight wins at the Hungarian and British Grands 🥂Prix.
Races remaining after winning title
The final record on 💦our list is races ꦉremaining after winning the title.
In 2022, 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Max Verstappen ♊had four༺ races left when he won his second title at the Japanese Grand Prix.
20 years earlier, there w🌳ere an astonishing six races left when Schumacher was crowned a ❀five-time champion in 2002.

With a sharp eye for F1’s controversies and storylines, Connor is the 🔥heartbeat of our unbiased reporting.