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Kimi-Matias Räikkönen (born 17 October 1979 in Espoo, Finland) is a retired Finnish Formula One driver who, over the course of his career, drove for Sauber, McLaren, Ferrari, Lotus and Alfa Romeo. He won the 2007 World Drivers' Championship in his first year with Ferrari after replacing the then-retired Michael Schumacher, and went on to win 21 Grands Prix, more than any other Finnish driver in Formula 1 history. After a two-year stint at Alfa Romeo (formerly Sauber), Räikkönen retired at the end of the 2021 season. At the time of his retirement, he held the distinction as the most experienced driver in F1 history with 349 Grand Prix starts. However, he lost this distinction to Fernando Alonso the following year.


Formula One Career[]

2001: Sauber[]

Raik-mont-alon-bern-melb-2001

the 2001 debutants, from left to right: Räikkönen, Montoya, Alonso and Bernoldi.

On 18th September 2000, Räikkönen was offered his first Formula One test drive at the Mugello Circuit with the Sauber team. Räikkönen had impressed the team after dominating the British Formula Renault championship despite only ever having completed twenty-three motor races in his career; of those twenty-three, he had notably won thirteen of them. He struggled with neck pains on the first day, but by the second day, he had suitably adapted and shaved three seconds off his time. Over the three days, Räikkönen completed 80 laps of the circuit. His intentions at the time was that his performance would earn him a test drive for 2001 with a plan to race in Formula 3. However, Räikkönen's testing performance had impressed Sauber so much, that they wished to sign him as a race driver for 2001. Räikkönen's inexperience in motor racing meant it was difficult for him to convince the FIA to grant him a superlicense to race with. However, after impressing again in a test during November 2000, the FIA opted to grant Räikkönen his superlicense, and Sauber signed Räikkönen for the 2001 season alongside another young driver, Nick Heidfeld. The decision to appoint Räikkönen a superlicense was highly controversial, as many believed he was too inexperienced for Formula One. FIA President Max Mosley was the most notable opponent against Räikkönen's race drive. Subsequently, Räikkönen would race in the first four races under the scrutiny of the FIA, and depending on his performance, would decide whether or not to revoke his superlicense.

For the first race in Australia, Räikkönen qualified in thirteenth, only three places behind teammate Heidfeld. Räikkönen ran a quiet race, yet was promoted several places due to the retirements in the race. Despite finishing the race in seventh, Räikkönen was promoted to sixth after the BAR of Olivier Panis was given a 25-second time penalty for overtaking teammate Heidfeld under waved yellow flags. Räikkönen therefore scored points on his F1 debut, it was also a strong result for Sauber with Heidfeld finishing fourth. 

In Malaysia, Räikkönen qualified in fourteenth, once again three places behind Heidfeld. At the start, Räikkönen failed to even make it off the grid due to a driveshaft failure; he therefore was forced to retire on the opening lap of the race.

Räikkönen appeared much stronger in Brazil when he qualified in a strong tenth place, a single position behind teammate Heidfeld. He made a strong start climbing to eighth position, directly behind teammate Heidfeld. However, Räikkönen began to drop back from Heidfeld, who appeared much more competitive. On lap 9, Olivier Panis overtook Räikkönen for eighth place. Räikkönen would remain in ninth until lap 57, when in the wet conditions, he slid off the circuit into the gravel and into retirement. It was a disappointing result for Räikkönen, who had to watch teammate Heidfeld take his first podium in the race.

San Marino was the next venue, and for the first time, Räikkönen outqualified teammate Heidfeld, qualifying in tenth, three places above his teammate. Räikkönen had a strong start climbing to seventh; in the early stages of the race, he duelled with the Ferrari of Michael Schumacher before being forced to relinquish the position. Räikkönen began to close on Panis's BAR for sixth; however, just as he began to get on his tail, Räikkönen suffered a steering wheel failure which saw him veer violently to the right at turn 7 and crash into the wall, ending his race.

For Spain, Räikkönen once again outqualified Heidfeld, starting from ninth, one place ahead of his teammate. At the start, Heidfeld got the better of him and got past, as did Olivier Panis. Räikkönen later duelled the Jaguar of Eddie Irvine before Irvine retired from the race. Räikkönen went on to finish the race in eighth, two places behind teammate Heidfeld.

In Austria, Räikkönen qualified in ninth position three places behind Heidfeld. He made a strong start climbing up to sixth, one of the cars he past being his teammate. Räikkönen continued to run a strong race and due to retirements of the cars ahead of him he found himself running in a brilliant third position. However, Michael Schumacher in the superior Ferrari machinery overtook the Finn on the 28th lap. Räikkönen then ran a quiet race to the finish taking a strong fourth position in the race. Despite a stewards investigation post-race in which BAR claimed Räikkönen had overtaken a backmarker under yellow flags, no action was taken and Räikkönen kept his fourth place.

For the Monaco Grand Prix, Sauber seemed uncompetitive with Räikkönen only managing fifteenth, one place ahead of Heidfeld. The race did not go to plan either, Räikkönen pulled into the pits in what seemed to be a retirement due to a technical issue. However four laps later Räikkönen got back into the car and continued the race albeit well out of contention, the team using the race as an effective test session there on after.

Fortunes improved for Canada, Räikkönen managed to qualify a competitive seventh on the grid. In the race Räikkönen held his position, retirements in the race meant he ran to as high as fourth. However, Mika Häkkinen in the superior McLaren machinery managed to overtake Räikkönen for the position. Later in the race Räikkönen began to close in on the Jordan of Jarno Trulli, Räikkönen found himself stuck behind the slower Jordan driver unable to pass and soon came under pressure from the Prost of Jean Alesi. Finally on lap 64, five laps before the end Räikkönen was able to overtake Trulli and took fourth position in the race.

It was another promising qualifying for the European race at Nürburgring with Räikkönen starting from ninth position. Räikkönen had an uninteresting race, seemingly not having the pace to challenge for points and finished the race in tenth position.  In France, Räikkönen qualified in thirteenth place, four places behind Heidfeld. Räikkönen got a tremendous start, climbing five places going into the first corner. On lap 7, Räikkönen overtook the Jordan of Heinz-Harald Frentzen for seventh. Frentzen remained on the Finn's tail and took the place back on lap 11. Räikkönen eventually took seventh back during the pit-stops but remained in the position until the conclusion of the race.

In Britain, Räikkönen put in another strong qualifying performance to start from seventh. At the start he overtook both the Jordan cars of Frentzen and Trulli but lost a place to the Williams of Juan Pablo Montoya. Räikkönen would remain in sixth for most of the race until Ralf Schumacher's retirement which promoted him to fifth, a position he would remain until the finish.

Germany was the next venue and Räikkönen qualified in eighth, one place behind Heidfeld. With Heidfeld retiring on the opening lap, Räikkönen was promoted to seventh. He would come under extreme pressure from Eddie Irvine's Jaguar, yet Räikkönen held his ground. On lap 16, Räikkönen was forced out of the race due to a halfshaft failure.

Images (2)

Räikkönen at the Hungarian GP.

At the Hungarian GP, Räikkönen qualified in ninth two places behind Heidfeld. Räikkönen climbed to seventh in the race yet remained stuck behind teammate Heidfeld and was unable to pass going on to finish the race in seventh, just outside the points.

In Belgium, Räikkönen lined up an uncompetitive twelfth, his race ended on the first lap due to a transmission failure. The next race in Italy saw Räikkönen qualify ninth, just behind Heidfeld. In the first few laps Räikkönen climbed to sixth position. He would remain in sixth for much of the race yet he lost out during a pit-stop phaze and lost sixth to the BAR of Jacques Villeneuve. Räikkönen went on to finish seventh in the race.

At the United States GP, Räikkönen had a disappointing qualifying only managing eleventh on the grid. Despite this he made a strong start climbing several places up the field. On the second lap him and teammate Heidfeld who was directly behind closed in on Jarno Trulli's Jordan for eighth position. Räikkönen whilst attempting to overtake made contact with the back of the Jordan, his front wing saw severe damage and he was forced to pit. The damage to the front of his car was so severe he was forced to retire.

Jean-alesi

The aftermath of Räikkönen's accident with Alesi in Japan.

In the final round of the season at Japan, Räikkönen qualified in twelfth position. On the fifth lap, Räikkönen suffered a rear suspension failure at the Dunlop curve. Jordan driver Jean Alesi could not avoid him and slammed Räikkönen into the wall, causing a tremendous accident which saw Räikkönen lose all four wheels on his car.

It had been an overall strong first season for Räikkönen, who finished tenth in the championship with eight points, only three points less than his more experienced teammate.

2002-2006: McLaren[]

2002[]

Despite being signed to Sauber until 2003, Räikkönen's strong performances had gained the attention of many top level teams. Räikkönen had been rumoured to move to Ferrari for 2002, however whilst interested in the young Finn Ferrari felt he was still not mature enough to gain a seat with the team. Instead when fellow Finnish driver Mika Häkkinen announced a sabbatical from F1 for 2002, McLaren opted to sign Räikkönen as a replacement for the 2002 season, being announced in September 2001 just after the Italian Grand Prix. Räikkönen would be partnered in the team by Scottish driver David Coulthard who had been racing in McLaren for the past six seasons.

In Australia, Räikkönen qualified a competitive fifth position, directly behind teammate Coulthard. Going into the first corner there was a major pile-up which saw eight cars eliminated at the start of the race, whilst Räikkönen was one of the survivors of the incident, his front wing was damaged requiring him to pit for a new nosecone dropping him to last during the safety car period. Räikkönen began a strong comeback drive climbing through the field where he finally caught up to teammate Coulthard in third and overtook him on lap 15. Räikkönen still had a signifcant gap to the leaders Juan Pablo Montoya and Michael Schumacher, yet Räikkönen had slowly began to catch them. When the two leaders pitted, Räikkönen for the very first time led a grand prix. After he had made his own pit stop, he had managed to jump Montoya for second place; however, on lap 39, he made a mistake going into turn 1, and went off the circuit, allowing Montoya back into second. From there on, after Räikkönen was unable to challenge either Montoya or Schumacher, he still managed to bring the car home in third, taking his first podium in his very first race with McLaren.

In Malaysia, Räikkönen once again qualified in fifth position, this time ahead of Coulthard. Räikkönen benefitted at the start after a collision between Schumacher and Montoya, allowing him to climb to third behind Rubens Barrichello and Ralf Schumacher. Whilst running in a competitive third position, it would be a disappointing result for the young Finn when he was forced to retire on lap 24 with an engine failure.

Räikkönen qualified in fifth for the third time in a row in Brazil, once again little separated the two McLaren's and Coulthard just edged Räikkönen out for fourth on the grid. Räikkönen made a poor start and dropped to seventh position. Whilst he was promoted to sixth following Barrichello's retirement, Räikkönen struggled to advance when he got stuck behind the slower Renault car of Jenson Button. It took until lap 39 when Räikkönen was finally able to overtake Button for fifth. Räikkönen was able to quickly catch the second Renault of Jarno Trulli and overtook him for fourth position. In the dying laps Räikkönen began to put teammate Coulthard under pressure for third position, however disaster struck with only three laps to go. Whilst chasing down Coulthard Räikkönen made a critical error going into turn 4 and spun off the circuit. This meant Räikkönen dropped down to twelfth position, where he would remain for the final three laps.

It was another fifth place qualifying position for Räikkönen in the fourth round of the championship in San Marino, Räikkönen bettering teammate Coulthard by one position. Räikkönen ran in a solid fifth position throughout the race until lap 44, when he suffered another retirement due to an exhaust pipe failure.

In Spain, Räikkönen took another fifth position in qualifying and once again outpaced teammate Coulthard. At the start, Räikkönen made it up to fourth position, but his race ended after only four laps when his rear wing failed and flew off his car going down the main pit-straight. 

Austria was the next venue on the calendar, Räikkönen taking sixth position in qualifying yet once again outqualified his teammate. However at the start Coulthard got the better of Räikkönen to take sixth position from him. Whilst Räikkönen pressured Coulthard to take the place back he suffered a huge engine failure on the fifth lap which saw flames coming out of the rear of the car. Räikkönen once again being hampered by McLaren's poor reliability.

Monaco saw Räikkönen take another sixth place in qualifying, yet was some margin off teammate Coulthard who took second on the grid. Räikkönen was unable to advance his position in the race. For most of the Grand Prix, Räikkönen duelled with the Ferrari of Rubens Barrichello; despite the Ferrari driver being faster, he was unable to find a way past the young Finn. After being stuck behind Räikkönen for most of the race, frustration got the better of Barrichello and he made a mistake coming out of the tunnel and slammed into the rear of Räikkönen's car. Both drivers were forced into the pits whilst Barrichello continued Räikkönen was forced to yet again retire from the race and look on as teammate Coulthard took McLaren's first win of the season.

After the disappointment in Monaco, Räikkönen qualified a competitive fifth for Canada, three places ahead of Coulthard. He made a strong start passing the Williams of Ralf Schumacher for fourth. After the first round of pit-stops, Räikkönen was able to get ahead of the other Williams of Montoya for third. He remained in this position for much of the race, but following the last round of pit stops, Räikkönen lost his third place to teammate Coulthard, who was putting in some very fast lap times. Räikkönen would finish the race in fourth, one place behind teammate Coulthard, getting his first points since Australia.

In Europe, Räikkönen qualified in sixth, one place behind teammate Coulthard. Räikkönen would spend much of the first stint in sixth position. On lap 17, he dropped to seventh when he made a mistake on track allowing the Renault of Jenson Button through. Within a few laps, Räikkönen had managed to retake sixth from Button. He was then promoted to fourth following a collison between Coulthard and Montoya which sent them both out of the race. Räikkönen had begun to lap very competitively, managing to overtake Ralf Schumacher for third during the pit-stop phase. Whilst running a competitive third Räikkönen's McLaren did not have the pace to challenge the two Ferrari's of Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello at the front. He went on to take third, his second podium in Formula One.

It was another fifth place qualifying position for Räikkönen in Britain, notably remaining ahead of Coulthard on his home turf. At the start Räikkönen climbed to fourth following a first corner mistake by Barrichello. Räikkönen notably was very competitive in Britain being able to quickly dispose of Ralf Schumacher's Williams at the start before then being able to close in on the leaders of Juan Pablo Montoya and Michael Schumacher. On lap 13 Räikkönen closed in upon Michael Schumacher's Ferrari and overtook for second position. Räikkönen's race was ruined however in his first pit stop when the mechanics struggled to attach a wheel to his car. His pitstop misadventure meant that he had dropped down to seventh on the track. In the wet conditions Räikkönen overtook Button rapidly for sixth following the pit-stop he then quickly disposed of Ralf Schumacher for fifth beginning a strong recovery drive. Then shortly afterwards he managed to overtake Jarno Trulli's Renault for fourth. A strategy error meant he dropped to tenth position following the next round of pit-stops. To put his misery to an end Räikkönen retired on lap 44 with another engine failure.

In France Räikkönen put in a strong qualifying performace to start from fourth on the grid. Due to Barrichello's startline retirement Räikkönen was promoted to third at the start. Throughout the race Räikkönen duelled with the two cars ahead of him, that of Schumacher's Ferrari and Montoya's Williams. During the pit-stop phase both Räikkönen and Schumacher were able to overtake Montoya. When it was found out that Schumacher had crossed the white line after one of his pit-stops, he was handed a drive through penalty allowing Räikkönen to take the lead. Räikkönen held a steady lead for the final stint of the race, seemingly on course for his first win. Schumacher's Ferrari after recovering from his penalty had begun to bare down on Räikkönen at a significant rate and with only four laps to go Schumacher overtook Räikkönen for the lead and won the race as well as taking his fifth championship. Räikkönen went home to finish in second position, one second adrift of Schumacher.

In Germany, Räikkönen qualified in fifth position. On the first lap he was able to overtake the Williams of Montoya for fourth position. The two would then engage in an intense duel for the position over the following laps. Räikkönen and Montoya nearly coming to blows on lap 11 as their duel intensified. Despite managing to hold Montoya back for a significant period of time, Räikkönen eventually lost fourth to Montoya. After being forced to let Montoya through Räikkönen came under pressure for fifth by his teammate Coulthard, however on lap 39 he suffered a tyre blowout which sent him flying onwards at the hairpin. He was luckily able to recover yet had to nurse his car back to the pits after his puncture. Räikkönen dropped to last following the puncture, he then began to suffer brake problems in the race as a result of the puncture and on lap 59 he suffered a brake failure sending him flying into the gravel trap.

In Hungary, McLaren appeared rather uncompetitive Räikkönen only managing eleventh on the grid, one place behind teammate Coulthard. Räikkönen made a strong start climbing up to eighth going into the first corner. For the second race in succession Räikkönen and Montoya battled, this time Räikkönen chasing down Montoya for seventh. On lap 22 Räikkönen dived down the inside of Montoya going into the first corner forcing his way through and into the position. During the pit-stop phase Räikkönen moved into sixth position and began to hound the Sauber of Felipe Massa for fifth. The two McLaren's however utilised a strong two stop strategy to allow them to jump their nearest rivals so that Räikkönen and Coulthard would run fourth and fifth to the end of the race, a strong recovery from the pair after a dismal qualifying.

In Belgium, Räikkönen put in a phenomenal qualifying performance challenging for pole position, however he was forced to settle for second behind the superior Ferrari chassis of Michael Schumacher. It would be a poor start for Räikkönen his McLaren not having the same pace as his Ferrari and Williams rivals with Rubens Barrichello and Juan Pablo Montoya overtaking in the opening laps. Räikkönen and Coulthard ran in fourth and fifth position, unable to compete with the top three runners. On lap 35 Räikkönen retired from the race with yet another engine failure.

Räikkönen qualified in sixth position for the Italian Grand Prix. At the start Räikkönen overtook Eddie Irvine's Jaguar for fifth position. He would remain in fifth until lap 29 when yet again his Mercedes engine suffered a failure forcing him out of the race.

The United States was the next venue and Räikkönen took another sixth position on the grid. Räikkönen climbed to fifth at the start of the race. He appeared somewhat uncompetitive and Jacques Villeneuve in the BAR overtook him for fifth on lap 14. Three laps later Montoya easily took sixth from the young Finn. However it was another engine failure on lap 50 which would be his downfall sending him out of the race.

The final race in Japan saw Räikkönen have a strong qualifying, starting from fourth right behind teammate Coulthard. At the start Räikkönen dropped to fifth losing a position to Ralf Schumacher. Räikkönen however found himself back in fourth following Coulthard's retirement. Despite an off on lap 32, Räikkönen ran consistently in fourth to put a positive to his difficult season Ralf Schumacher retired towards the end of the race promoting Räikkönen to third behind the two Ferrari cars allowing him to finish the season with a podium.

Räikkönen finished the championship in sixth seventeen points behind teammate Coulthard. Räikkönen had often proven to be quicker and more consistent however his persistant reliability problems which saw him finish only six times in the season hampered his championship ambitions.

2003[]

For 2003, both Räikkönen and Coulthard were retained at McLaren for the new season. McLaren appeared to be more competitive than in 2002, however during qualifying for the first round of Australia, both Räikkönen and Coulthard messed up their flying laps on the new one flying lap qualifying format. Räikkönen who went off the circuit would start from fifteenth with Coulthard in eleventh. Räikkönen, however elected to start from the pit-lane. He made a storming drive through the field and was soon battling for the lead with Michael Schumacher's Ferrari and Juan Pablo Montoya's Williams. Räikkönen inherited the lead on lap 16, however was being challenged directly by Schumacher behind him. Schumacher however would botch his overtake manoeuvere going into the first corner, being forced to return to the pits for repairs. Räikkönen looked to have the race in hand but was then handed a drive-through penalty for speeding in the pit-lane after his first stop. This forced him to drop to third, a position he would remain until the end of the race as teammate Coulthard took the race win ahead of Montoya in second.

For the second race of the season in Malaysia, Räikkönen qualified in seventh, three places behind Coulthard. It would be a strong start for Räikkönen managing to overtake Barrichello's Ferrari into the first corner and then a tangle between the other Ferrari of Schumacher and Renault's Jarno Trulli promoted Räikkönen a further two places to fourth. Coulthard who was running second retired on the second lap leaving Räikkönen the sole running McLaren in third. Räikkönen then engaged in a duel with former teammate Nick Heidfeld in the Sauber for second, Räikkönen finally managing to overtake Heidfeld on the third lap moving up into second position. Räikkönen ran in second behind the Renault of Fernando Alonso. Alonso who was running a lighter fuel load was forced to pit on lap 14, Räikkönen inheriting the lead of the race. Räikkönen began setting a series of fastest laps and when he came into the pits on lap 19, he exited ahead of Alonso's Renault keeping the lead of the race. Räikkönen went on to dominate the race, taking his first F1 victory, 39 seconds ahead of Rubens Barrichello in second position. With this, Räikkönen took over the lead of the championship with 16 points, six ahead of teammate Coulthard in second.

The next race in Brazil saw Räikkönen qualify in fourth position, however once again he was two places behind teammate Coulthard. The race was held in extremely wet conditions, Räikkönen managed to overtake Mark Webber's Jaguar for third at the start, holding station behind Barrichello and Coulthard who took the race lead. The race saw a number of accidents due to the driving difficulties of the wet conditions. Barrichello repassed Coulthard for the lead yet was forced to retire on lap 47. This meant it was a McLaren one-two with Coulthard leading Räikkönen. On lap 51 Coulthard came into the pits meaning Räikkönen took the lead of the race. However the Jordan of Giancarlo Fisichella was baring down on Räikkönen for the lead at a significant pace. On lap 53 there was a huge accident between Alonso's Renault and Webber's Jaguar bringing out the red flags. At the start of the 54th lap Fisichella overtook Räikkönen for the lead, however as this was a lap after the red flags there was some confusion who won the race. Initially it was Räikkönen who was classified the winner, however by the next race in Imola, a stewards review determined it was Fisichella who should be deemed the race win, Räikkönen being demoted to second. Nonetheless Räikkönen still had a eleven point lead in the championship.

At the San Marino Grand Prix, Räikkönen could only manage a sixth position placing on the grid. Räikkönen overtook Webber's Jaguar at the start climbing to fifth position. Räikkönen took the lead ahead of teammate Coulthard on lap 17, however by lap 21 he had to make his pit-stop dropping back to fourth behind Michael Schumacher, Ralf Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello. Making use of a strong two stop strategy, Räikkönen was able to leapfrog both Barrichello and Ralf Schumacher. On lap 56, Michael Schumacher had a nineteen second lead over Räikkönen, by lap 58 this had been reduced to eleven. Räikkönen was catching Schumacher at a rapid pace, by the final 62nd lap Räikkönen had closed the gap to 1.1 seconds yet it was not enough to challenge for the lead. Despite taking second, Räikkönen was able to further increase his lead in the championship.

In qualifying for the Spanish race, Räikkönen notably went off the circuit on his one flying lap, returning his damaged car to the pits it meant he was forced to start from twentieth at the back of the grid. The race faired little better, at the start the Jaguar of Antônio Pizzonia failed to leave the grid, Räikkönen was unable to avoid the stricken Jaguar and smashed into the back of Pizzônia. Both drivers were forced out of the race on the spot. Michael Schumacher won the race in his Ferrari, reducing Räikkönen's championship lead to four points.

The next venue in Austria saw Räikkönen qualifying in second, right behind championship rival Michael Schumacher. The start saw Räikkönen drop to third behind Juan Pablo Montoya's Williams, however he was able to keep in striking distance between Montoya and Schumacher ahead of him. On lap 23, both Schumacher and Räikkönen came into the pits, due to a pitstop fire Schumacher's pit-stop was delayed allowing Räikkönen to move ahead into second place behind Montoya. Montoya retired on lap 32 with an engine failure, but Räikkönen did not inherit the lead as on the same lap Schumacher had managed to overtake him going into turn 3. Räikkönen was from thereafter unable to challenge Schumacher who began pulling away, he went on to finish the race in second position. Schumacher had now closed Räikkönen's championship lead to within two points.

In Monaco, Räikkönen once again qualified in second position, this time losing pole to the Williams of Ralf Schumacher. At the start Montoya managed to overtake Räikkönen going into the first corner leaving it a Williams one-two. Räikkönen remained on their tale and hounded both Schumacher and Montoya. When the two Williams cars came into the pits Räikkönen took the lead however on lap 25 he too came into the pits. Räikkönen exited the pits ahead of Ralf Schumacher but remained behind Montoya. In the pit-stop phase Michael Schumacher had emerged ahead of his brother and was now behind Räikkönen. Both Räikkönen and Schumacher proved quicker than Montoya, but the tight twisty nature of Monaco meant they were unable to pass, being forced to concede the win to Montoya. Nevertheless Räikkönen had now managed to increase his championship lead to four points over Schumacher.

It was another costly qualifying for Räikkönen in Canada, crashing out on his flying lap meaning once again he would be forced to start from the back of the grid. Räikkönen would stage a great comeback from the back of the grid slowly carving his way through the field throughout the race. Räikkönen by race end had climbed to sixth and was hounding the back of Rubens Barrichello's Ferrari yet found he was unable to find a way past the Ferrari driver. Räikkönen being forced to settle for sixth. As Schumacher won the race, it meant he took over the championship lead by three points over Räikkönen. 

For the European race, Räikkönen finally managed to claim his first Formula One pole position, beating Schumacher's Ferrari to the top spot in the qualifying session. Räikkönen held his lead into the first corner, beginning to build up a solid gap to Ralf Schumacher in second, his lead being over nine seconds before his first pit-stop on lap 16. Räikkönen looked set to take his second victory until a rare engine failure on lap 25 forced him out of the race. A devastating blow to his championship aspirations allowing Michael Schumacher to increase his championship lead.

2004[]

2005[]

2006[]

2007-2009: Ferrari[]

2007[]

2008[]

2009[]

Despite having a contract to race for Ferrari in 2010, Räikkönen announced that he would be leaving the team at the near end of the season.

Expecting to return to McLaren to partner alongside with Lewis Hamilton, but the negotiations failed. He was also linked to the Mercedes team, but they picked up on Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg instead.

Toyota, before they pulled out of Formula One in the end of 2009, also offered Räikkönen to race for the team to replace Timo Glock. According to BBC, Räikkönen rejected the contract because he wanted to drive on a race-winning car.

2012-2013: Return to Formula One with Lotus[]

Lotus E20

Raikkonen driving the Lotus E20.

On 29 November 2011, Kimi Räikkönen returned to Formula One for the new Lotus team, partnering alongside Romain Grosjean.

2012[]

At the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, during the safety car period, after Räikkönen was told by his race engineer that he will keep Räikkönen updated on the gap, he responded with the message: "Leave me alone, I know what I'm doing", stating that he has everything under control.[1] The message became popular on the Internet, and Räikkönen gave the entire Lotus team T-shirts of the radio message.[2]

2013[]

Räikkönen started his second season with Lotus with a win at the Australian Grand Prix, ahead of Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel.

In the Monaco Grand Prix, after McLaren's Sergio Pérez tried to overtake Räikkönen into the hairpin, Räikkönen got angry and threatened to "get physical" with the Mexican.

At the Indian Grand Prix, while having a battle with his team-mate Romain Grosjean, he pushed Grosjean off the track but his team-mate gave the position back to him. His race engineer, Alan Permane, shouted at him to get out of his team-mate's way via a team radio and he ended up with responding with an equal force.

Räikkönen wound up sitting out the final two races of the season, due to back surgery.

2014–present: Return to Ferrari[]

On 11 September 2013, it was confirmed that Räikkönen would return to the Scuderia Ferrari team, replacing the departed Felipe Massa.

2014[]

The first half of the season was disappointing for Räikkönen, as he could not finish ahead of his teammate, Fernando Alonso, until the Belgian Grand Prix where he finished fourth. He finished ahead of his teammate again at Italy and Japan, despite Alonso retired due to mechanical failures.

At the ninth round at Silverstone, Räikkönen lost control of his Ferrari after a bump as he tried to rejoin the track, and crashed into the tyre barrier at an impact of 47G, forcing him to miss the Silverstone test. He came back to the German Grand Prix after he was fit to continue in the next round.

2015[]

Räikkönen stayed at Ferrari for the 2015 season, partnering alongside Sebastian Vettel.

The start to the season at Australia was bad for the Finn, retiring on lap 40 after a loose wheel from a botched pitstop. After a season without a single podium since 2001, he finished on the podium at the Bahrain Grand Prix in 2nd place for the first time since the 2013 Korean Grand Prix.

In the Hungarian Grand Prix, both him and his team-mate Vettel were leading one-two until the safety car was deployed. After the safety car, Räikkönen experienced an issue with the engine power and had to retire, ending Ferrari's chances of taking a possible one-two finish.

On 19 August, it was announced that Räikkönen extended his contract with the team for the 2016 season.

2016[]

Räikkönen suffered another bad start to the season. Despite the Ferraris leading one-two at the Australian Grand Prix, Räikkönen had to retire from a turbo failure on lap 21.

Formula One Statistical Overview[]

Formula One Record[]

Year Entrant Team WDC Pts. WDC Pos. Report
2000 Switzerland Red Bull Sauber Petronas Sauber-Petronas Test Driver
2001 Switzerland Red Bull Sauber Petronas Sauber-Petronas 9 10th Report
2002 United Kingdom West McLaren Mercedes McLaren-Mercedes 24 6th Report
2003 United Kingdom West McLaren Mercedes McLaren-Mercedes 91 2nd Report
2004 United Kingdom West McLaren Mercedes McLaren-Mercedes 45 7th Report
2005 United Kingdom West McLaren Mercedes
United Kingdom Team McLaren Mercedes
McLaren-Mercedes 91 2nd Report
2006 United Kingdom Team McLaren Mercedes McLaren-Mercedes 65 5th Report
2007 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro Ferrari 65 1st Report
2008 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro Ferrari 75 3rd Report
2009 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro Ferrari 48 6th Report
20102011: Did not compete
2012 United Kingdom Lotus F1 Team Lotus-Renault 207 3rd Report
2013 United Kingdom Lotus F1 Team Lotus-Renault 183 5th Report
2014 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 55 12th Report
2015 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 150 4th Report
2016 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 186 6th Report
2017 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 205 4th Report
2018 Italy Scuderia Ferrari Ferrari 251 3rd Report
2019 Switzerland Alfa Romeo Racing Alfa Romeo Racing-Ferrari 43 12th Report
2020 Switzerland Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen Alfa Romeo Racing-Ferrari 4 16th Report
2021 Switzerland Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen Alfa Romeo Racing-Ferrari 10 16th Report

Career Statistics[]

Correct as of the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix qualifying


Entries 353
Starts 349
Pole Positions 18
Sprint Poles 0
Front Row Starts 44
Race Wins 21
Sprint Wins 0
Podiums 103
Sprint Podiums 0
Fastest Laps 46
Sprint Fastest Laps 0
Points 1873
Laps Raced 18621
Distance Raced 92,636 km (57,561 mi)
Races Led 83
Laps Led 1305
Distance Led 6,614 km (4,110 mi)
Doubles 6
Hat-Tricks 2

Race Wins[]

Win Number Grand Prix
1 2003 Malaysian Grand Prix
2 2004 Belgian Grand Prix
3 2005 Spanish Grand Prix
4 2005 Monaco Grand Prix
5 2005 Canadian Grand Prix
6 2005 Hungarian Grand Prix
7 2005 Turkish Grand Prix
8 2005 Belgian Grand Prix
9 2005 Japanese Grand Prix
10 2007 Australian Grand Prix
11 2007 French Grand Prix
12 2007 British Grand Prix
13 2007 Belgian Grand Prix
14 2007 Chinese Grand Prix
15 2007 Brazilian Grand Prix
16 2008 Malaysian Grand Prix
17 2008 Spanish Grand Prix
18 2009 Belgian Grand Prix
19 2012 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
20 2013 Australian Grand Prix
21 2018 United States Grand Prix

Career Results[]

Complete Formula One Results
Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Pts Pos
2001 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Brazil Flag of San Marino Flag of Spain Flag of Austria Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Europe Flag of France Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of the United States Flag of Japan 9 10th
6th Ret Ret Ret 8th 4th 10th 4th 10th 7th 5th Ret 7th DNS 7th Ret Ret
2002 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Brazil Flag of San Marino Flag of Spain Flag of Austria Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Europe Flag of Great Britain Flag of France Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of the United States Flag of Japan 24 6th
3rd Ret 12th Ret Ret Ret Ret 4th 3rd Ret 2nd Ret 4th Ret Ret Ret 3rd
2003 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Brazil Flag of San Marino Flag of Spain Flag of Austria Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Europe Flag of France Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Italy Flag of the United States Flag of Japan 91 2nd
3rd 1st 2nd 2nd Ret 2nd 2nd 6th Ret 4th 3rd Ret 2nd 4th 2nd 2nd
2004 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Bahrain Flag of San Marino Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Europe Flag of Canada Flag of the United States Flag of France Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of China Flag of Japan Flag of Brazil 45 7th
Ret Ret Ret 8th 11th Ret Ret 5th 6th 7th 2nd Ret Ret 1st Ret 3rd 6th 2nd
2005 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Bahrain Flag of San Marino Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Europe Flag of Canada Flag of the United States Flag of France Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary link =2005 Turkish Grand Prix Flag of Italy Flag of Belgium Flag of Brazil Flag of Japan Flag of China 112 2nd
8th 9th 3rd Ret 1st 1st 11th 1st DNS 2nd 3rd Ret 1st 1st 4th 1st 2nd 1st 2nd
2006 Flag of Bahrain Flag of Malaysia Flag of Australia Flag of San Marino Flag of Europe Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Great Britain Flag of Canada Flag of the United States Flag of France Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Turkey Flag of Italy Flag of China Flag of Japan Flag of Brazil 65 5th
3rd Ret 2nd 5th 4th 5th Ret 3rd 3rd Ret 5th 3rd Ret Ret 2nd Ret 5th 5th
2007 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Bahrain Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of the United States Flag of France Flag of Great Britain Flag of Europe Flag of Hungary Flag of Turkey Flag of Italy Flag of Belgium Flag of Japan Flag of China Flag of Brazil 110 1st
1st 3rd 3rd Ret 8th 5th 4th 1st 1st Ret 2nd 2nd 3rd 1st 3rd 1st 1st
2008 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Bahrain Flag of Spain Flag of Turkey Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of France Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Europe Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Japan Flag of China Flag of Brazil 75 3rd
8th 1st 2nd 1st 3rd 9th Ret 2nd 4th 6th 3rd Ret 18th 9th 15th 3rd 3rd 3rd
2009 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of China Flag of Bahrain Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Turkey Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Europe Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Japan Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 48 6th
15th 14th
[3]
10th 6th Ret 3rd 9th 8th Ret 2nd 3rd 1st 3rd 10th 4th 6th 12th
20102011: Did not compete
2012 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of China Flag of Bahrain Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Europe Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Japan Flag of South Korea Flag of India Flag of the United Arab Emirates Flag of the United States Flag of Brazil 207 3rd
7th 5th 14th 2nd 3rd 9th 8th 2nd 5th 3rd 2nd 3rd 5th 6th 6th 5th 7th 1st 6th 10th
2013 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of China Flag of Bahrain Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of South Korea Flag of Japan Flag of India Flag of the United Arab Emirates Flag of the United States Flag of Brazil 183 5th
1st 7th 2nd 2nd 2nd 10th 9th 5th 2nd 2nd Ret 11th 3rd 2nd 5th 7th Ret INJ INJ
2014 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of Bahrain Flag of China Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Austria Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Japan Flag of Russia Flag of the United States Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 55 12th
7th 12th 10th 8th 7th 12th 10th 10th Ret 11th 6th 4th 9th 8th 12th 9th 13th 7th 10th
2015 Flag of Australia Flag of Malaysia Flag of China Flag of Bahrain Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Austria Flag of Great Britain Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Japan Flag of Russia Flag of the United States Flag of Mexico Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 150 4th
Ret 4th 4th 2nd 5th 6th 4th Ret 8th Ret 7th 5th 3rd 4th 8th Ret Ret 4th 3rd
2016 Flag of Australia Flag of Bahrain Flag of China Flag of Russia Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Europe Flag of Austria Flag of Great Britain Flag of Hungary Flag of Germany Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Malaysia Flag of Japan Flag of the United States Flag of Mexico Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 186 6th
Ret 2nd 5th 3rd 2nd Ret 6th 4th 3rd 5th 6th 6th 9th 4th 4th 4th 5th Ret 6th Ret 6th
2017 Flag of Australia Flag of China Flag of Bahrain Flag of Russia Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of Azerbaijan Flag of Austria Flag of Great Britain Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Malaysia Flag of Japan Flag of the United States Flag of Mexico Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 205 4th
4th 5th 4th 3rd Ret 2nd 7th 14th 5th 3rd 2nd 4th 5th Ret DNS 5th 3rd 3rd 3rd 4th
2018 Flag of Australia Flag of Bahrain Flag of China Flag of Azerbaijan Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of France Flag of Austria Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Russia Flag of Japan Flag of the United States Flag of Mexico Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 251 3rd
3rd Ret 3rd 2nd Ret 4th 6th 3rd 2nd 3rd 3rd 3rd Ret 2nd 5th 4th 5th 1st 3rd 3rd Ret
2019 Flag of Australia Flag of Bahrain Flag of China Flag of Azerbaijan Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Canada Flag of France Flag of Austria Flag of Great Britain Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Singapore Flag of Russia Flag of Japan Flag of Mexico Flag of the United States Flag of Brazil Flag of the United Arab Emirates 43 12th
8th 7th 9th 10th 14th 17th 15th 7th 9th 8th 12th 7th 16th 15th Ret 13th 12th Ret 11th 4th 13th
2020 Flag of Austria Flag of Styria Flag of Hungary Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of Spain Flag of Belgium Flag of Italy Flag of Tuscany Flag of Russia Flag of Germany Flag of Portugal Flag of Italy Flag of Turkey Flag of Bahrain Flag of Bahrain Flag of the United Arab Emirates 4 16th
Ret 11th 15th 17th 15th 14th 12th 13th 9th 14th 12th 11th 9th 15th 15th 14th 12th
2021 Flag of Bahrain Flag of Italy Flag of Portugal Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Azerbaijan Flag of France Flag of Styria Flag of Austria Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of Hungary Flag of Belgium Flag of the Netherlands Flag of Italy Flag of Russia Flag of Turkey Flag of the United States Flag of Mexico Flag of Brazil Flag of Qatar Flag of Saudi Arabia Flag of the United Arab Emirates 10 16th
11th 13th Ret 12th 11th 10th 17th 11th 15th 15th 10th 18th
[4]
WD ILL 8th 12th 13th 7th 12th 14th 15th Ret
Key
Symbol Meaning Symbol Meaning
1st Winner Ret Retired
2nd Podium finish DSQ Disqualified
3rd DNQ Did not qualify
5th Points finish DNPQ Did not pre-qualify
14th Non-points finish TD Test driver
Italics Scored point(s) for Fastest Lap DNS Did not start
18th Classified finish (retired with >90% race distance) NC Non-classified finish (<90% race distance)
4thP Qualified for pole position [+] More Symbols

References[]

V T E Finland Kimi Räikkönen
Seasons
2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2014 • 2015 • 2016 • 2017 • 2018 • 2019 • 2020 • 2021
Season Reports
2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2014 • 2015 • 2016 • 2017 • 2018 • 2019 • 2020 • 2021
Teams
Sauber (2001) • McLaren (2002-2006) • Ferrari (2007-2009, 2014-2018) • Lotus (2012-2013) • Alfa Romeo (2019-2021)
Teammates
Nick Heidfeld (2001) • David Coulthard (2002-2004) • Juan Pablo Montoya (2005-2006) • Pedro de la Rosa (2005-2006) • Alexander Wurz (2005) • Felipe Massa (2007-2009) • Luca Badoer (2009) • Giancarlo Fisichella (2009) • Romain Grosjean (2012-2013) • Jérôme d'Ambrosio (2012) • Fernando Alonso (2014) • Sebastian Vettel (2015-2018) • Antonio Giovinazzi (2019-2021)
Other pages
Statistics • Teammate comparison • Category
V T E Alfa Romeo logo Alfa Romeo
Personnel
Ruth Buscombe · Carlo Chiti · Robert Choulet · Gioacchino Colombo · Gérard Ducarouge · Gérard Ducarouge · Eric Gandelin · Timothy Guerin · Axel Kruse · Simone Resta · Julien Simon-Chautemps · Beat Zehnder
Drivers
77. Finland Valtteri Bottas · 24. China Guanyu Zhou
Test Drivers
France Théo Pourchaire
Former Drivers
Italy Luigi Fagioli · United Kingdom Reg Parnell · Italy Felice Bonetto · Italy Bruno Giacomelli · Italy Vittorio Brambilla · France Patrick Depailler · Italy Andrea de Cesaris · United States Mario Andretti · Italy Mauro Baldi · Italy Riccardo Patrese · United States Eddie Cheever · Finland Kimi Räikkönen · Italy Antonio Giovinazzi · Poland Robert Kubica
World Champions
Italy Giuseppe Farina (1950) · Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio (1951)
Italy Alfa Romeo Cars (1950–1951, 1979–1985)
158 · 8C-308 · 159 · 177 · 179/179B/179C/179D · 182 · 183T · 184T/184TB · 185T
Switzerland Alfa Romeo F1 Team Cars (2019–2023)
C38 · C39 · C41 · C42 · C43
Full results
V T E Sauber 2010 Sauber F1 Team
Former drivers
Bottas · Ericsson · Leclerc · Wehrlein · Nasr · Hülkenberg · Pérez · Kobayashi · Kubica · Heidfeld · Räikkönen · Zhou · more
Former Personnel
Frédéric Vasseur · Pascal Picci · Alex Sauber · Eric Gandelin · Timothée Guerin · Axel Kruse · Beat Zehnder
Engine Suppliers
Ilmor (1993) · Mercedes (1994) · Ford (1995-96) · Petronas (1997-2005) · Ferrari (2010-2018)
Cars
C12 · C13 · C14 · C15 · C16 · C17 · C18 · C19 · C20 · C21 · C22 · C23 · C24 · F1.06 · F1.07 · F1.08 · F1.09 · C29 · C30 · C31 · C32 · C33 · C34 · C35 · C36 · C37 · C44
See also
BMW Sauber · Alfa Romeo
V T E McLarenLogo McLaren Racing
Founder
Bruce McLaren
Notable Personnel
Éric Boullier · Ron Dennis · Tim Goss · Jonathan Neale · Neil Oatley · Peter Prodromou
Former Notable Personnel
John Barnard · Gordon Coppuck · Pat Fry · Norbert Haug · Robin Herd · Paddy Lowe · Neil Martin · Teddy Mayer · Sam Michael · Gordon Murray · Adrian Newey · Steve Nichols · Jo Ramirez · Nicholas Tombazis · Martin Whitmarsh
Drivers
4. United Kingdom Lando Norris · 81. Australia Oscar Piastri
World Champions
Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi (1974) · United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton (2008) · United Kingdom James Hunt (1976) · Finland Mika Häkkinen (1998, 1999) ·
Austria Niki Lauda (1984) · France Alain Prost (1985, 1986, 1989) · Brazil Ayrton Senna (1988, 1990, 1991)
F1 Cars
M2B · M4B · M5A · M7A · M7B · M7C · M7D · M9A · M14A · M14D · M19A · M19C · M23 · M26 · M28 · M29 · M29B · M29C · M29F · M30 · MP4/1 · MP4B · MP4/1C · MP4/1E · MP4/2 · MP4/2B · MP4/2C · MP4/3 · MP4/4 · MP4/5 · MP4/5B · MP4/6 · MP4/6B · MP4/7A · MP4/8 · MP4/9 · MP4/10 · MP4/10B · MP4/10C · MP4/11 · MP4/11B · MP4/12 · MP4/13 · MP4/14 · MP4/15 · MP4-16 · MP4-17 · MP4-17D · MP4-18 · MP4-19 · MP4-19B · MP4-20 · MP4-21 · MP4-22 · MP4-23 · MP4-24 · MP4-25 · MP4-26 · MP4-27 · MP4-28 · MP4-29 · MP4-30 · MP4-31 · MCL32 · MCL33 · MCL34 · MCL35 · MCL35M · MCL36 · MCL60
Season Reports
1966 · 1967 · 1968 · 1969 · 1970 · 1971 · 1972 · 1973 · 1974 · 1975 · 1976 · 1977 · 1978 · 1979 · 1980 · 1981 · 1982 · 1983 · 1984 · 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989 · 1990 · 1991 · 1992 · 1993 · 1994 · 1995 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 1999 · 2000 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011 · 2012 · 2013 · 2014 · 2015 · 2016 · 2017 · 2018 · 2019 · 2020 · 2021 · 2022 · 2023
Full results
V T E FerrariLogo Scuderia Ferrari
Drivers
16. Monaco Charles Leclerc · 55. Spain Carlos Sainz, Jr.
Test Drivers
Israel Robert Shwartzman
Personnel
Sergio Marchionne · Maurizio Arrivabene · James Allison · Jock Clear
World Champions
Italy Alberto Ascari (1952, 1953) · Argentina Juan Manuel Fangio (1956) · United Kingdom Mike Hawthorn (1958) · United States Phil Hill (1961) · United Kingdom John Surtees (1964) · Austria Niki Lauda (1975, 1977) · South Africa Jody Scheckter (1979) · Germany Michael Schumacher (2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004) · Finland Kimi Räikkönen (2007)
Cars
125 · 166F2-50 · 166S · 212 · 275 · 375 · 375 TW · 375 Indy · 500 · 553 · 553 Squalo · 555 · 625 · D50 · 801 · Dino 156 F2 · Dino 246 · Dino 246P · 156 · 156/63 · 156 Aero · 158 · 1512 · 246 F1-66 · 312 · 312/67 · 312/68 · 312/69 · 312B · 312B2 · 312B3 · 312B3-74 · 312T · 312T2 · 312T2B · 312T3 · 312T4 · 312T5 · 126CK · 126C2 · 126C2B · 126C3 · 126C4 · 156/85 · F186 · F1/87 · F1/87/88C · 640 · 641 · 641/2 · 642 · 643 · F92A · F92AT · F93A · 412T1 · 412T1B · 412T2 · F310 · F310B · F300 · F399 · F1-2000 · F2001 · F2002 · F2003-GA · F2004 · F2004M · F2005 · 248 F1 · F2007 · F2008 · F60 · F10 · 150° Italia · F2012 · F138 · F14 T · SF15-T · SF16-H · SF70H · SF71H · SF90 · SF1000 · SF21 · F1-75 · SF-23
V T E Lotus F1 Team logo Lotus F1
Notable Drivers
Finland Kimi Räikkönen · France Romain Grosjean · Venezuela Pastor Maldonado · Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio · Finland Heikki Kovalainen
Personnel
Éric Boullier · Nick Chester
Cars
E20 · E21 · E22 · E23 Hybrid
See also
Renault
V T E List of World Drivers' Champions
1950: Giuseppe Farina
1951: Juan Manuel Fangio
1952: Alberto Ascari
1953: Alberto Ascari
1954: Juan Manuel Fangio
1955: Juan Manuel Fangio
1956: Juan Manuel Fangio
1957: Juan Manuel Fangio
1958: Mike Hawthorn
1959: Jack Brabham
1960: Jack Brabham
1961: Phil Hill
1962: Graham Hill
1963: Jim Clark
1964: John Surtees
1965: Jim Clark
1966: Jack Brabham
1967: Denny Hulme
1968: Graham Hill
1969: Jackie Stewart
1970: Jochen Rindt
1971: Jackie Stewart
1972: Emerson Fittipaldi
1973: Jackie Stewart
1974: Emerson Fittipaldi
1975: Niki Lauda
1976: James Hunt
1977: Niki Lauda
1978: Mario Andretti
1979: Jody Scheckter
1980: Alan Jones
1981: Nelson Piquet
1982: Keke Rosberg
1983: Nelson Piquet
1984: Niki Lauda
1985: Alain Prost
1986: Alain Prost
1987: Nelson Piquet
1988: Ayrton Senna
1989: Alain Prost
1990: Ayrton Senna
1991: Ayrton Senna
1992: Nigel Mansell
1993: Alain Prost
1994: Michael Schumacher
1995: Michael Schumacher
1996: Damon Hill
1997: Jacques Villeneuve
1998: Mika Häkkinen
1999: Mika Häkkinen
2000: Michael Schumacher
2001: Michael Schumacher
2002: Michael Schumacher
2003: Michael Schumacher
2004: Michael Schumacher
2005: Fernando Alonso
2006: Fernando Alonso
2007: Kimi Räikkönen
2008: Lewis Hamilton
2009: Jenson Button
2010: Sebastian Vettel
2011: Sebastian Vettel
2012: Sebastian Vettel
2013: Sebastian Vettel
2014: Lewis Hamilton
2015: Lewis Hamilton
2016: Nico Rosberg
2017: Lewis Hamilton
2018: Lewis Hamilton
2019: Lewis Hamilton
2020: Lewis Hamilton
2021: Max Verstappen
2022: Max Verstappen
2023: Max Verstappen
V T E List of World Drivers' Championship runners-up
1950: Juan Manuel Fangio
1951: Alberto Ascari
1952: Giuseppe Farina
1953: Juan Manuel Fangio
1954: José Froilán González
1955: Stirling Moss
1956: Stirling Moss
1957: Stirling Moss
1958: Stirling Moss
1959: Tony Brooks
1960: Bruce McLaren
1961: Wolfgang von Trips
1962: Jim Clark
1963: Graham Hill
1964: Graham Hill
1965: Graham Hill
1966: John Surtees
1967: Jack Brabham
1968: Jackie Stewart
1969: Jacky Ickx
1970: Jacky Ickx
1971: Ronnie Peterson
1972: Jackie Stewart
1973: Emerson Fittipaldi
1974: Clay Regazzoni
1975: Emerson Fittipaldi
1976: Niki Lauda
1977: Jody Scheckter
1978: Ronnie Peterson
1979: Gilles Villeneuve
1980: Nelson Piquet
1981: Carlos Reutemann
1982: Didier Pironi
1983: Alain Prost
1984: Alain Prost
1985: Michele Alboreto
1986: Nigel Mansell
1987: Nigel Mansell
1988: Alain Prost
1989: Ayrton Senna
1990: Alain Prost
1991: Nigel Mansell
1992: Riccardo Patrese
1993: Ayrton Senna
1994: Damon Hill
1995: Damon Hill
1996: Jacques Villeneuve
1997: Heinz-Harald Frentzen*
1998: Michael Schumacher
1999: Eddie Irvine
2000: Mika Häkkinen
2001: David Coulthard
2002: Rubens Barrichello
2003: Kimi Räikkönen
2004: Rubens Barrichello
2005: Kimi Räikkönen
2006: Michael Schumacher
2007: Lewis Hamilton
2008: Felipe Massa
2009: Sebastian Vettel
2010: Fernando Alonso
2011: Jenson Button
2012: Fernando Alonso
2013: Fernando Alonso
2014: Nico Rosberg
2015: Nico Rosberg
2016: Lewis Hamilton
2017: Sebastian Vettel
2018: Sebastian Vettel
2019: Valtteri Bottas
2020: Valtteri Bottas
2021: Lewis Hamilton
2022: Charles Leclerc
2023: Sergio Pérez
* Michael Schumacher was disqualified from the 1997 championship.
V T E Teams and Drivers
2001 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariMcLarenWilliamsBenettonBARJordanArrowsSauberJaguarMinardiProst
Engines AcerAsiatechBMWCosworthEuropeanFerrariHondaMercedesPetronasRenault
Drivers 1 M. Schumacher • 2 Barrichello • 3 Häkkinen • 4 Coulthard • 5 R. Schumacher • 6 Montoya • 7 Fisichella • 8 Button • 9 Panis • 10 Villeneuve • 11 Frentzen • 11 Zonta • 11/12 Trulli • 12 Alesi • 14 Verstappen • 15 Bernoldi • 16 Heidfeld • 17 Räikkönen • 18 Irvine • 19 Burti • 19 de la Rosa • 20 Marques • 20 Yoong • 21 Alonso • 22 Alesi • 22 Frentzen • 23 Mazzacane • 23 Burti • 23 Enge
2002 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariMcLarenWilliamsSauberJordanBARRenaultJaguarArrowsMinardiToyota
Engines FerrariMercedesBMWPetronasHondaRenaultCosworthAsiatechToyota
Drivers 1 M. Schumacher • 2 Barrichello • 3 Coulthard • 4 Räikkönen • 5 R. Schumacher • 6 Montoya • 7 Heidfeld • 8 Massa • 8 Frentzen • 9 Fisichella • 10 Sato • 11 Villeneuve • 12 Panis • 14 Trulli • 15 Button • 16 Irvine • 17 de la Rosa • 20 Frentzen • 21 Bernoldi • 22 Yoong • 22 Davidson • 23 Webber • 24 Salo • 25 McNish
2003 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariWilliamsMcLarenRenaultSauberJordanJaguarBARMinardiToyota
Engines BMWCosworthFerrariFordHondaMercedesPetronasRenaultToyota
Drivers 1 M. Schumacher • 2 Barrichello • 3 Montoya • 4 R. Schumacher • 4 Gené • 5 Coulthard • 6 Räikkönen • 7 Trulli • 8 Alonso • 9 Heidfeld • 10 Frentzen • 11 Fisichella • 12 Firman • 12 Baumgartner • 14 Webber • 15 Pizzonia • 15 Wilson • 16 Villeneuve • 16 Sato • 17 Button • 18 Wilson • 18 Kiesa • 19 Verstappen • 20 Panis • 21 Da Matta
Other Drivers BadoerBerettaBruniDavidsonDe la RosaLottererMassaMcNishMontagnyPaffettWurzZonta
2004 Teams and Drivers
Teams Ferrari • Williams • McLaren • Renault • BAR • Sauber • Jaguar • Toyota • Jordan • Minardi
Engines BMW • Ferrari • Ford Cosworth • Honda • Mercedes • Petronas • Toyota
Drivers 1 M. Schumacher • 2 Barrichello • 3 Montoya • 4 R. Schumacher • 4 Gené • 4 Pizzonia • 5 Coulthard • 6 Räikkönen • 7/16 Trulli • 7 Villeneuve • 8 Alonso • 9 Button • 10 Sato • 11 Fisichella • 12 Massa • 14 Webber • 15 Klien • 16 da Matta • 16/17 Zonta • 17 Panis • 18 Heidfeld • 19 Pantano • 19 Glock • 20 Bruni • 21 Baumgartner
Other Drivers Albers • Badoer • Bell • Beretta • Bernoldi • Bertolini • Briscoe • Burti • Carroll • Congfu • Davidson • Davison • Del Monte • Dixon • Doornbos • Firman • Green • Hamilton
2005 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariBARRenaultWilliamsMcLarenSauberRed BullToyotaJordanMinardi
Engines BMWCosworthFerrariHondaMercedesPetronasRenaultToyota
Drivers 1 M. Schumacher • 2 Barrichello • 3 Button • 4 Sato • 4 Davidson • 5 Alonso • 6 Fisichella • 7 Webber • 8 Heidfeld • 8 Pizzonia • 9 Räikkönen • 10 Montoya • 10 De la Rosa • 10 Wurz • 11 Villeneuve • 12 Massa • 14 Coulthard • 15 Klien • 15 Liuzzi • 16 Trulli • 17 R. Schumacher • 17 Zonta • 18 Monteiro • 19 Karthikeyan • 20 Friesacher • 20 Doornbos • 21 Albers
Other Drivers BadoerBernoldiGenéKiesaKovalainenMontagnyPanisRosbergSpeedYamamoto
2006 Teams and Drivers
Teams RenaultMcLarenFerrariToyotaWilliamsHondaRed BullBMW SauberMidlandToro RossoSuper Aguri
Engines BMWCosworthFerrariHondaMercedesRenaultToyota
Drivers 1 Alonso • 2 Fisichella • 3 Räikkönen • 4 Montoya • 4 De la Rosa • 5 M. Schumacher • 6 Massa • 7 R. Schumacher • 8 Trulli • 9 Webber • 10 Rosberg • 11 Barrichello • 12 Button • 14 Coulthard • 15 Klien • 15 Doornbos • 16 Heidfeld • 17 Villeneuve • 17 Kubica • 18 Monteiro • 19 Albers • 20 Liuzzi • 21 Speed • 22 Sato • 23 Ide • 23 Montagny • 23 Yamamoto
Other Drivers BadoerDavidsonHamiltonKovalainenPiquetSutilVettelWurz
2007 Teams and Drivers
Teams McLarenRenaultFerrariHondaBMW SauberToyotaRed BullWilliamsToro RossoSpykerSuper Aguri
Engines BMWFerrariHondaMercedesRenaultToyota
Drivers 1 Alonso • 2 Hamilton • 3 Fisichella • 4 Kovalainen • 5 Massa • 6 Räikkönen • 7 Button • 8 Barrichello • 9 Heidfeld • 10 Kubica/Vettel • 11 R. Schumacher • 12 Trulli • 14 Coulthard • 15 Webber • 16 Rosberg • 17 Wurz/Nakajima • 18 Liuzzi • 19 Speed/Vettel • 20 Sutil • 21 Albers/Winkelhock/Yamamoto • 22 Sato • 23 Davidson
Other Drivers AlbuquerqueAmmermüllerAndrettiAsmerBadoerBirdBourdaisBuemiChandhokChandhok
2008 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariBMW SauberRenaultWilliamsRed BullToyotaToro RossoHondaSuper AguriForce IndiaMcLaren
Engines MercedesRenaultFerrariBMWToyotaHonda
Race Drivers Räikkönen • 2 Massa • 3 Heidfeld • 4 Kubica • 5 Alonso • 6 Piquet, Jr • 7 Rosberg • 8 Nakajima • 9 Coulthard • 10 Webber • 11 Trulli • 12 Glock • 14 Bourdais • 15 Vettel • 16 Button • 17 Barrichello • 18 Sato • 19 Davidson • 20 Sutil • 21 Fisichella • 22 Hamilton • 23 Kovalainen
Other Drivers Badoer • Gené • Schumacher • Klien • Asmer • di Grassi • Grosjean • Yamamoto • Hülkenberg • Buemi • Kobayashi • Hartley • Wurz • Conway • Filippi • Liuzzi • Paffett • de la Rosa
2009 Teams and Drivers
Teams McLarenFerrariBMW SauberRenaultToyotaToro RossoRed BullWilliamsForce IndiaBrawn
Engines MercedesRenaultFerrariBMWToyota
Race Drivers Hamilton • 2 Kovalainen • 3 Massa • Badoer • 4 Räikkönen • 5 Kubica • 6 Heidfeld • 7 Alonso • 8 Piquet, Jr • 8 Grosjean • 9 Trulli • 10 Glock • 10 Kobayashi • 11 Bourdais • 11 Alguersuari • 12 Buemi • 14 Webber • 15 Vettel • 16 Rosberg • 17 Nakajima • 20 Sutil • 21/3 Fisichella • 21 Liuzzi • 22 Button • 23 Barrichello
Other Drivers Paffett • de la Rosa • Gené • Klien • di Grassi • Hartley • Coulthard • Hülkenberg • Davidson • Wurz
2012 Teams and Drivers
Teams Red Bull • McLaren • Ferrari • Mercedes • Lotus • Force India • Sauber • Toro Rosso • Williams • Caterham • HRT • Marussia
Engines Renault • Ferrari • Mercedes • Cosworth
Race Drivers Vettel • 2 Webber • 3 Button • 4 Hamilton • 5 Alonso • 6 Massa • 7 Schumacher • 8 Rosberg • 9 Räikkönen • 10 Grosjean • d'Ambrosio • 11 di Resta • 12 Hülkenberg • 14 Kobayashi • 15 Pérez • 16 Ricciardo • 17 Vergne • 18 Maldonado • 19 Senna • 20 Kovalainen • 21 Petrov • 22 de la Rosa • 23 Karthikeyan • 24 Glock • Pic
Other Drivers Buemi • Paffett • Turvey • Gené • Rigon • Fisichella • Bird • Hartley • Korjus • Bianchi • Daly • Guttiérrez • Bottas • Wolff • van der Garde • Rossi • González • Clos • Ma • Liuzzi • Chilton • de Villota
2013 Teams and Drivers
Teams Red Bull • Ferrari • McLaren • Lotus • Mercedes • Sauber • Force India • Williams • Toro Rosso • Caterham • Marussia
Engines Renault • Ferrari • Mercedes • Cosworth
Race Drivers Vettel • 2 Webber • 3 Alonso • 4 Massa • 5 Button • 6 Pérez • 7 Räikkönen • 7 Kovalainen • 8 Grosjean • 9 Rosberg • 10 Hamilton • 11 Hülkenberg • 12 Gutiérrez • 14 Di Resta • 15 Sutil • 16 Maldonado • 17 Bottas • 18 Vergne • 19 Ricciardo • 20 Pic • 21 Van der Garde • 22 Bianchi • 23 Chilton
Other Drivers Buemi • Félix da Costa • Sainz Jr. • Gené • De la Rosa • Rigon • Paffett • Turvey • Magnussen • d'Ambrosio • Prost • Valsecchi • Hartley • Bird • Frijns • Sato • Sirotkin • Rossiter • Calado • Wolff • Juncadella • Kyvat • Rossi • Ma • Stevens • Razia • González • Ellinas
2014 Teams and Drivers
Teams Caterham • Ferrari • Force India • Lotus • Marussia • McLaren • Mercedes • Red Bull • Sauber • Toro Rosso • Williams
Engines Ferrari • Mercedes • Renault
Drivers Vettel • 3 Ricciardo • 4 Chilton • 6 Rosberg • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 9 Ericsson • 10 Kobayashi • 11 Pérez • 13 Maldonado • 14 Alonso • 17 Bianchi • 19 Massa • 20 Magnussen • 21 Gutiérrez • 22 Button • 25 Vergne • 26 Kvyat • 27 Hülkenberg • 42 Rossi • 44 Hamilton • 45 Lotterer • 46 Stevens • 77 Bottas • 99 Sutil
Other Drivers Buemi • De la Rosa • Félix da Costa • Frijns • Gené • Juncadella • Paffett • Rigon • Sirotkin • Sørensen • Turvey • Van der Garde • Vandoorne • Wolff
2015 Teams and Drivers
Teams Ferrari • Force India • Lotus • Marussia • McLaren • Mercedes • Red Bull • Sauber • Toro Rosso • Williams
Engines Ferrari • Honda • Mercedes • Renault
Drivers Ricciardo • 5 Vettel • 6 Rosberg • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 9 Ericsson • 11 Pérez • 12 Nasr • 13 Maldonado • 14 Alonso • 19 Massa • 20 Magnussen • 21 Gutiérrez • 22 Button • 26 Kvyat • 27 Hülkenberg • 28 Stevens • 33 Verstappen • 44 Hamilton • 53 Rossi • 55 Sainz • 77 Bottas • 98 Merhi
Other Drivers Buemi • Celis • Daruvala • De la Rosa • Félix da Costa • Fong • Gasly • Gutiérrez • Jordá • King • Leimer • Lynn • Marciello • Palmer • Pic • Prost • Rigon • Sutil • Turvey • Vandoorne • Vergne • Wehrlein • Wolff
2016 Teams and Drivers
Teams Ferrari • Force India • Haas • Manor • McLaren • Mercedes • Red Bull • Renault • Sauber • Toro Rosso • Williams
Engines Ferrari • Honda • Mercedes • Renault • TAG Heuer
Drivers Ricciardo • 5 Vettel • 6 Rosberg • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 9 Ericsson • 11 Pérez • 12 Nasr • 14 Alonso • 19 Massa • 20 Magnussen • 21 Gutiérrez • 22 Button • 26 Kvyat • 27 Hülkenberg • 30 Palmer • 31 Ocon • 33 Verstappen • 44 Hamilton • 47 Vandoorne • 55 Sainz • 77 Bottas • 88 Haryanto • 94 Wehrlein
Other Drivers Celis • di Resta • Fong • Fuoco • Gasly • Jordá • Kari • King • Leclerc • Lynn • Matsushita • Mazepin • Paffett • Rossi • Stroll • Turvey • Vandoorne • Vergne
2017 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariForce IndiaHaasMcLarenMercedesRed BullRenaultSauberToro RossoWilliams
Engines FerrariHondaMercedesRenaultTAG Heuer
Drivers 2 Vandoorne • 3 Ricciardo • 5 Vettel • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 9 Ericsson • 10 Gasly • 11 Pérez • 14 Alonso • 18 Stroll • 19 Massa • 20 Magnussen • 22 Button • 26 Kvyat • 27 Hülkenberg • 30 Palmer • 31 Ocon • 33 Verstappen • 36 Giovinazzi • 39 Hartley • 40 di Resta • 44 Hamilton • 55 Sainz • 77 Bottas • 94 Wehrlein
Other Drivers CaldéronCelisFongFuocoKariMatsushitaRussellTurvey
2018 Teams and Drivers
Teams FerrariForce IndiaForce India (Racing Point)HaasMcLarenMercedesRed BullRenaultSauberToro RossoWilliams
Engines FerrariHondaMercedesRenaultTAG Heuer
Drivers 2 Vandoorne • 3 Ricciardo • 5 Vettel • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 9 Ericsson • 10 Gasly • 11 Pérez • 14 Alonso • 16 Leclerc • 18 Stroll • 20 Magnussen • 27 Hülkenberg • 28 Hartley • 31 Ocon • 33 Verstappen • 35 Sirotkin • 44 Hamilton • 55 Sainz • 77 Bottas
Other Drivers AitkenBuemiCalderónDennisGelaelGiovinazziGutiérrezKubicaKvyatLatifiMarkelovMazepinNorrisRowlandRussellTurveyWehrlein
2019 Teams and Drivers
Teams Alfa RomeoFerrariHaasMcLarenMercedesRacing PointRed BullRenaultToro RossoWilliams
Engines FerrariHondaMercedesRenault
Drivers 3 Ricciardo • 4 Norris • 5 Vettel • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 10 Gasly • 11 Pérez • 16 Leclerc • 18 Stroll • 20 Magnussen • 23 Albon • 26 Kvyat • 27 Hülkenberg • 33 Verstappen • 44 Hamilton • 55 Sainz • 63 Russell • 77 Bottas • 88 Kubica • 99 Giovinazzi
Other Drivers AitkenAlonsoBuemiCalderónCâmaraCorreaDelétrazEricssonFittipaldiFuocoGutiérrezHartleyLatifiOconRigonSchumacherSirotkinTicktumVandoorneWehrleinYamamoto
2020 Teams and Drivers
Teams Alfa RomeoAlphaTauriFerrariHaasMcLarenMercedesRacing PointRed BullRenaultWilliams
Engines FerrariHondaMercedesRenault
Drivers 3 Ricciardo • 4 Norris • 5 Vettel • 6 Latifi • 7 Räikkönen • 8 Grosjean • 10 Gasly • 11 Pérez • 16 Leclerc • 18 Stroll • 20 Magnussen • 23 Albon • 26 Kvyat • 31 Ocon • 33 Verstappen • 44 Hamilton • 55 Sainz • 63 Russell • 77 Bottas • 99 Giovinazzi
Other Drivers AitkenBuemiCalderónCâmaraDelétrazFittipaldiHülkenbergIlottKubicaKvyatNissanySchumacherSirotkinTsunodaVandoorneVipsZhou
2021 Teams and Drivers
Teams Alfa RomeoAlphaTauriAlpineAston MartinFerrariHaasMcLarenMercedesRed BullWilliams
Engines FerrariHondaMercedesRenault
Drivers 3 Ricciardo • 4 Norris • 5 Vettel • 6 Latifi • 7 Räikkönen • 9 Mazepin • 10 Gasly • 11 Pérez • 14 Alonso • 16 Leclerc • 18 Stroll • 22 Tsunoda • 31 Ocon • 33 Verstappen • 44 Hamilton • 47 Schumacher • 55 Sainz • 63 Russell • 77 Bottas • 99 Giovinazzi
Other Drivers AitkenAlbonCalderónFittipaldiHülkenbergIlottKubicaKvyatNissanydi RestaVandoorneVipsde VriesZhou


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