The last two Formula 1 seasons could hardly have been more different.
In 2023 Max Verstappen and Red Bull smashed the records for dominance. But in 2024 their rivals hit back and F1 set new benchmarks for competitiveness.What will 2025 bring? Many are hopeful last year’s close competition will continue – no driver has taken back-to-back wins for the last 15 grands prix (ignoring sprint races). The last time F1 saw a longer run than this was across the 2011 and 2012 seasons, when no driver won consecutive grands prix for 17 rounds in a row.
Seven different drivers won races last year but some of those have swapped seats since. If Carlos Sainz Jnr manages to win again this year he’ll deliver Williams’ first victory for 13 years.
Lewis Hamilton has taken his place at Ferrari. He ended by far the longest victory drought of his career last season – his British Grand Prix win was his first for 56 rounds. However he has already equalled his second-longest win-less run since then, at 10 races.
But this drought pales next to that of Fernando Alonso, who will mark 12 years since his last victory if he doesn’t win any of the first six rounds. Given Aston Martin’s form at the end of last year, that seems likely.
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Hamilton could end his latest win-less run by taking victory on his debut for Ferrari. He’ll be in good company if he does: His fellow world champions Alonso, Kimi Raikkonen, Nigel Mansell, Mario Andretti and Juan Manuel Fangio all won on their first appearances for the Scuderia.
Hamilton’s departure to Ferrari means his record of starting the most races exclusively with the same engine manufacturer will come to an end. Every one of his 356 starts has been powered by a Mercedes. During that time he has won a record 105 grands prix.
He is still heading slowly towards Michael Schumacher’s record of 77 fastest laps. Hamilton set two last year, putting him on a total of 67. As the fastest lap is no longer worth a bonus point, there will be less competition for them this year.
Formula 1 has an influx of six new full-time drivers this year. However only one of them has picked a number which no driver has used since the FIA introduced ‘career numbers’ in 2014. That’s Oliver Bearman, who will race with number 87.
Meanwhile Isack Hadjar will become the third driver to use number six under the current rules – the first time the same number has been chosen by three different drivers. It previously belonged to Nico Rosberg (2014-16) and Nicholas Latifi (2020-22). Out of the 97 numbers available to drivers (every single and double-digit number excluding one, which is reserved the reigning world champion, and 17, which was withdrawn in honour of Jules Bianchi) still more than half have never been chosen.
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Jack Doohan would have joined the small group of drivers who made their grand prix debuts on home ground. However his unexpected early start at Alpine means that will no longer happen.
For the third year in a row, F1 will make three visits to the United States of America. Liberty Media’s eagerness to grow the sport in the USA means the country will overtake Britain and Germany this year to be F1’s second most frequently visited country. The Las Vegas Grand Prix will be America’s 82nd world championship round, but by the end of the year Italy will have held 109.
Underlining the swing in competitiveness we saw from year to year, Verstappen won all three US rounds in 2023, but three of his rivals from three different teams won the same events last year. Will he face similar opposition this year?
His chances of another championship success rest on this. If he does take another title, he will become only the second driver in F1 history after Michael Schumacher to win five drivers’ titles in a row – an achievement Verstappen denied Hamilton in that controversial finale at Yas Marina four years ago.
2025 F1 milestones
- Chinese Grand Prix: Ferrari’s 1,100th grand prix start
- Japanese Grand Prix: Sauber’s 400th grand prix start
- Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Aston Martin’s 100th grand prix start
- Miami Grand Prix: Nico Hulkenberg’s 250th participation in a race weekend
- Emilia Romagna Grand Prix: Red Bull’s 400th grand prix start
- Canadian Grand Prix: Haas’s 200th grand prix start, Yuki Tsunoda’s 100th participation in a race weekend
- Belgian Grand Prix: Yuki Tsunoda’s 100th grand prix start
- Qatar Grand Prix: Nico Hulkenberg’s 250th grand prix start
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Over to you
What other F1 records could be broken this year? Share your views in the comments.
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Jere (@jerejj)
10th February 2025, 8:09
Just some additional notes:
The 2021 season was originally also supposed to commence in Melbourne.
More precisely, 5 (Bortoleto), 7 (Doohan), & 12 (Antonelli) are the other numbers that will get re-used as regular driver numbers, with Seb, Kimi, & Felipe Nasr their respective previous users.
Tsunoda’s offset between his 100th official entry & 100th race start is a cause of suffering DNS three times, twice in Monza (2021 & 2023), & once in Jeddah (2022).
Bob
10th February 2025, 9:31
Jacky Ickx also drove for Ferarri, Mclaren and Williams. Togeather with Mansell, they both drove for Lotus aswell.
Keith Collantine (@keithcollantine)
10th February 2025, 10:12
He drove for Wolf-Williams which predated the current Williams team, but good point.
Bob
10th February 2025, 13:11
Yeah, it depends on which site you check. Wikipedia and F1 Stats say different things.
McLaren was only one race, I don’t know the story behind that, as a Belgian, I feel I should know.
anon
10th February 2025, 21:09
@keithcollantine he did also drive for the original Williams team (i.e. Frank Williams Racing Cars) in 1973, which would pre-date Walter Wolf’s takeover of the team in 1976. That said, the original team is usually discussed separately to the modern incarnation, given that it became Wolf Racing and then sold off to Fittipaldi Automotive in turn.
Bob, with regards to that one-off race – Ferrari chose not to participate in the 1973 German Grand Prix (this was during a period in the early 1970s when Ferrari was facing internal disputes over their development direction and participation in Formula 1), whilst March chose to withdraw after Roger Williamson’s death in the previous race in Zandvoort.
There were also several other teams that chose to withdraw from that race for a range of reasons (Ensign, Tecno and Hesketh), which meant the entry list was much smaller than originally expected. The organisers therefore allowed McLaren, Surtees and Brabham to run third cars to help fill the grid back up, and McLaren struck a deal with Ferrari that saw Ickx temporarily loaned to them for that particular race.
GeeMac (@geemac)
11th February 2025, 6:35
That’s correct, but the current team is Williams Grand Prix Engineering, which was incorporated in 1977 and has a different company number to Frank Williams Racing Cars Ltd, so Ickx technically hasn’t driven for this version of Williams.
peter
10th February 2025, 18:14
If Kimi Antonelli wins any of the first six GP’s this season, he will break Max’ record of youngest GP winner at 18 years and 228 days . Kimi’s last chance to do so is the Miami GP.
MacLeod (@macleod)
11th February 2025, 7:45
Max will break any Dutch records on most laps/races/points ….. If he reach podiums those too.
Cranberry
11th February 2025, 7:45
What’s up with the title of this article?
Unless Hamilton has managed to clone himself, it makes no sense…