How has the replacement of three drivers changed the complexion of the Formula 1 field this year?
The F1 drivers of 2023 span 15 countries and have over 50 motorsport championship titles between them. Here’s how they break down in numbers.
Starts
Two of Formula 1’s most experienced drivers bowed out at the end of last season – Sebastian Vettel was one race shy of his 300th start and Daniel Ricciardo was another member of the double century club. With three newcomers making their debuts as full-time drivers, the class of 2023 is slightly less experienced on the whole than last year’s field.
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Ages
Unsurprisingly, it’s a slightly younger field as well, though not by much: The average age of the drivers at the season-opener will be 28.2 years, down just 0.2 from 12 months earlier.
This is partly because one of those three newcomers, Nyck de Vries, is already older than more than half the field, including the reigning two-times world champion. De Vries was passed over for promotion after winning the Formula 2 title four years ago, and Andretti IndyCar driver Colton Herta was AlphaTauri’s original choice for his seat, but he didn’t have enough superlicence points to move into F1.
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Grand prix wins
Vettel is the third most-successful F1 driver of all time in terms of wins, and the departure of fellow multiple grand prix winner Ricciardo means the total number of races won by the current grid is well down on this time last year, dropping from 232 to 193.
However, factor in that George Russell and Carlos Sainz Jnr were yet to score their first victories before the start of last season, and the total number of race-winning drivers on the grid is unchanged. Half of the 20 drivers have already taken grand prix victories, though that pair plus Alpine’s new duo are all one-time winners.
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Countries
Herta may not have got his break, but the United states of America still has its first full-time F1 driver in 16 years in the shape of Logan Sargeant. The USA is one of 15 different countries represented on the grid this year, only four of which have more than one driver. These are the UK (three), France, Spain and the Netherlands (two each).
Championships (all series)
Only two drivers in the 20-strong field haven’t won a championship above karting level and they both drive for the same team: Alexander Albon and his new Williams team mate Sargeant.
The other 18 drivers have amassed 54 titles between them across F1 and the junior categories of motorsport.
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Driver | Championship | Year/s |
---|---|---|
Lewis Hamilton | British Formula Renault | 2003 |
Formula 3 Euroseries | 2005 | |
GP2 | 2006 | |
Formula 1 | 2008, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 | |
Lando Norris | British Formula 4 | 2015 |
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 | 2016 | |
Northern European Formula Renault | 2016 | |
Toyota Racing Series | 2016 | |
Formula 3 European Championship | 2017 | |
Fernando Alonso | Euro Open by Nissan | 1999 |
Formula 1 | 2005, 2006 | |
World Endurance Championship | 2018-19 | |
Nico Hulkenberg | German Formula BMW | 2005 |
A1 Grand Prix | 2007 | |
Formula 3 Euroseries | 2008 | |
GP2 | 2009 | |
Nyck de Vries | Formula Renault 2.0 Eurocup | 2014 |
Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS | 2014 | |
Formula 2 | 2019 | |
Formula E | 2021 | |
Valtteri Bottas | Formula Renault 2.0 Eurocup | 2008 |
Formula Renault NEC | 2008 | |
GP3 | 2011 | |
Lance Stroll | Italian Formula 4 | 2014 |
Toyota Racing Series | 2015 | |
Formula 3 European Championship | 2016 | |
Oscar Piastri | Formula Renault Eurocup | 2019 |
Formula 3 | 2020 | |
Formula 2 | 2021 | |
George Russell | BRDC British Formula 4 | 2014 |
GP3 | 2017 | |
Formula 2 | 2018 | |
Max Verstappen | Formula 1 | 2021, 2022 |
Charles Leclerc | GP3 | 2016 |
Formula 2 | 2017 | |
Carlos Sainz Jnr | Formula Renault NEC | 2011 |
Formula Renault 3.5 | 2014 | |
Pierre Gasly | Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 | 2013 |
GP2 | 2016 | |
Esteban Ocon | Formula 3 European Championship | 2014 |
GP3 | 2015 | |
Kevin Magnussen | Danish Formula Ford | 2008 |
Formula Renault 3.5 | 2013 | |
Sergio Perez | British Formula 3 (National class) | 2007 |
Zhou Guanyu | Formula Regional Asia (Asian Formula 3) | 2021 |
Yuki Tsunoda | Japanese Formula 4 | 2018 |
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Days since last win (all series)
For the first time in a career replete with success, Lewis Hamilton goes into a new F1 season seeking to end a victory drought which has lasted more than a year.
Others have to look back further for their most recent wins at any level. Notably the Aston Martin duo, Lance Stroll and new team mate Fernando Alonso, who haven’t taken a win in a the 2020s. Indeed, Alonso will mark the 10th anniversary of his last win in F1 this May.
But returning driver Nico Hulkenberg who has the longest win-less drought. Like Alonso, his most recent triumph came at the Le Mans 24 Hours, in his case with Porsche.
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