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Five of F1's most iconic driver

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Five of F1's most iconic driver

Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes After his death in an F2 race at Hockenheim in April 1968, Lotus team-mate Graham Hill would go onto win the title that year, with Jochen Rindt being crowned the posthumous 1970 world champion. Emerson Fittpaldi and Mario Andretti would add further titles before 1978 – when Clark would have been […]

Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes

After his death in an F2 race at Hockenheim in April 1968, Lotus team-mate Graham Hill would go onto win the title that year, with Jochen Rindt being crowned the posthumous 1970 world champion. Emerson Fittpaldi and Mario Andretti would add further titles before 1978 – when Clark would have been 42.A two-time world champion by 1965, Clark also collected the Indy 500 in 1965, making him the only person to win at the Brickyard and claim the F1 title in the same year.The most successful driver-team partnership of all-time in F1 has had its last dance with Lewis Hamilton’s 12th and final season at Mercedes.

Ayrton Senna and McLaren

This entry was perhaps the most difficult, but simply put, without Sebastian Vettel at Red Bull, there would be no Max Verstappen and Red Bull. Vettel is still perhaps the shining jewel in the Red Bull junior driver programme, claiming 38 wins and scooping his four world titles from 2010 and 2013. 			© XPBimages


© XPBimages

Michael Schuacher and Ferrari

Never has there been a more iconic livery and helmet combination and arguably, Senna still remains the McLaren driver, some 31 years after he left the team.He earned 35 of his 41 wins and all three titles for the team and some of F1’s most iconic moments came from the partnership. There was a healthy dollop of controversy thrown in along the way for a driver who set new F1 benchmarks in terms of commitment and team-building. It was the partnership that transformed Hamilton from ‘regular F1 world champion’ to the ranks of contender for greatest of all-time.

Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull

Since 2013, the F1 record-books have undergone a major re-write with most of Michael Schumacher’s records falling to Hamilton. To this day, he remains the youngest-ever F1 world champion aged 23 years, 134 days. Schumacher transcended F1 during his victory-laden spell at Ferrari where he helped turn the faltering Maranello outfit into a crushing force from also-rans. 

He won 84 races and six championships at Mercedes, eclipsing Schumacher’s 72 and five, respectively. 			© xpb.cc


© xpb.cc

Jim Clark and Lotus

His 25 grand prix wins from just 72 starts, all for Lotus, still place him 10th in the all-time wins list and he is third in the all-time wins percentage list for drivers at 34.72% only behind Juan Manuel Fangio (47.06%) and Alberto Ascari (40.63%).

			© Photo: Grand Prix Photo


© Photo: Grand Prix Photo

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