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Thread: F1 Records Unlikely To Be Broken
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21st April 2014, 19:46 #1
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F1 Records Unlikely To Be Broken
Lewis Hamilton's win yesterday in China, brought him even with Jim Clark and Niki Lauda in wins, just another indication how the record book is tilting toward current and much younger drivers. I mentioned in the Senna post above how Sebastian Vettel's youngest point scoring record has already fallen to Daniil Kvyat.
I thought it might be interesting to list records extremely unlikely to be broken:
Oldest win Luigi Fagioli 53 (French GP 1951 sh w Fangio)
Oldest point scorer Philippe Etancelin 56 ( 5th Italian GP 1950)
Oldest starter Louis Chiron 56 (Monaco 1955 finished 6th just out of points)
Driver/Constructor All Jack Brabham's records, wins, poles, fl, championships
John Surtees Titles and records on 2 and 4 wheels
Graham Hill's triple including Drivers Championship, Le Mans win, Indy 500 win.(only Jacques Villeneuve is still racing but lost his chance with Peugeot at Le Mans)
Anyone have further suggestions?Last edited by D28; 22nd April 2014 at 14:55.
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21st April 2014, 20:57 #2
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I agree with those. None are likely to be broken.
Apart from maybe the Indy/F1/LeMan I suppose. That could still happen.I still exist and still find the forum occasionally. Busy busy
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21st April 2014, 22:06 #3
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Indy racing is no longer a feeder series for F1 or unlikely to be so again. So the driver would have to do the F1 part first, then do Le Mans and Indy. That is a very tall order . In Hill's day it was possible to combine Indy with a F1 season as he, Clark, Brabham and several others did, now with specialization that is out. Mario Andretti also had a good shot but the Le Mans win eluded him. Its a good bet to remain an unique feat.
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22nd April 2014, 02:06 #4
I agree most of those won't be broken. I think the Indy/F1/Le Mans one is still pretty doable though. Juan Pablo Montoya won the 500 and finished 3rd in the F1 Championship twice in a row (he did however win at Monaco and Monaco, Indy and Le Mans are often considered to be the true definition of the "Triple Crown"). He never raced at Le Mans but he has won the very prestigious 24 Hours of Daytona. So basically, he hasn't done it and probably won't, but I think he's shown that it is at least doable in the modern era. A whole bunch of former F1 guys race at Le Mans every year and every once in a while you get an IndyCar guy like JPM or Sebastien Bourdais moving over to F1. All it takes is one.
As for the Jack Brabham one, I find it EXTREMELY unlikely, but I don't think its completely out of the realm of possibility. I was thinking that maybe a driver, later in his career, could buy the team (or at least a controlling stake in the team) he was driving for, and then win. Brawn bought Honda and won, so what would stop a driver from doing the same?Phil Hill - 1961
Mario Andretti -1978
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22nd April 2014, 09:11 #5
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The Indy/F1/Le Mans triple could definitely be done in that order, if a driver shows well in IndyCar before moving to F1 (Le Mans is almost certainly going to be the last one to be completed). There haven't been many drivers coming from Indy to F1 lately (struggling to think of the last; probably Bourdais, taking the wider world of Champ Car into account) but with Haas' team due soon that could easily change.
If anything, the major barrier to the triple at the moment is the fact that a number of veteran drivers have won Indy in the last few years, who are long past their F1 prime.
As for the oldest driver records, it's no surprise they were all set in the 1950s, as an entire generation was effectively lost, or at least severely disrupted, by World War II - hence many of the drivers in the early World Championship Grands Prix were the now ageing pre-war stars. Not sure we'd want to see those records broken if it requires similar circumstances...https://wordpress.com/stats/insights/stugrovesf1.wordpress.com
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22nd April 2014, 14:20 #6
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Keke Rosberg and Mike Hawthorn's least amount of race wins to win a title.
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22nd April 2014, 15:14 #7
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Sorry I should have said Driver/Constructor which I have now changed. I mean in the spirit of McLaren (when Bruce was alive) Gurney, Surtees and Graham Hill. Driving a car you had built from a team you assembled.
As for the GH triple, 7 guys have managed 2 of the 3, but it has been 42 years since Hill completed it at Le Mans. As for Monaco/Le Mans/Indy triple, that again would be Graham Hill quite the versatile driver.
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22nd April 2014, 18:37 #8
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22nd April 2014, 23:45 #9
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22nd April 2014, 23:49 #10
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Serenessima's record of scoring points in every gp a car powered by one of their engines started. These engines were used briefly by McLaren at the very start of McLaren's journey into F1. They entered in 3 races as McLaren/Serenssima, qualified for 1 and Bruce McLaren finished 6th in the race (GB 1966).
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