Official name | City of Abu Dhabi |
---|---|
Continent | Asia |
Name | Abu Dhabi|settlement_type City |
Native name | أبوظبي ''Abū Dhabi" |
Pushpin map | UAE |
Pushpin mapsize | 280 |
Pushpin map caption | Location of Abu Dhabi in the UAE |
Government type | Constitutional monarchy |
Subdivision type1 | Country |
Subdivision name1 | United Arab Emirates |
Coordinates display | inline,title |
Coordinates type | region:AE-AZ_type:city |
Leader title | Sheikh |
Leader name | Khalifa bin Zayed |
Leader title1 | Crown Prince |
Leader name1 | Mohammed bin Zayed |
Area total km2 | 67.34 |
Altitude | 27 |
Population as of | 2009 |
Population total | 896,751 |
Population density km2 | 13317 |
Utc offset | +4 |
Timezone | UAE standard time |
Website | Abu Dhabi Government Portal |
Footnotes | }} |
Abu Dhabi houses important offices of the federal government, and is the seat for the United Arab Emirates Government and the home for the Abu Dhabi Emiri Family and the President of the UAE from this family. Abu Dhabi has grown to be a cosmopolitan metropolis. Its rapid development and urbanisation, coupled with the relatively high average income of its population, has transformed Abu Dhabi to a larger and advanced metropolis. Today the city is the country's center of political, industrial activities, and a major cultural, and commercial centre due to its position as the capital. Abu Dhabi alone generated 56.7% of the GDP of the United Arab Emirates in 2008.
Abu Dhabi is home to important financial institutions such as the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates and the corporate headquarters of many companies and numerous multinational corporations. One of the world's largest producers of oil, Abu Dhabi has actively attempted to diversify its economy in recent years through investments in financial services and tourism. Abu Dhabi is the second most expensive city for expatriate employees in the region, and 50th most expensive city in the world. Fortune & CNN stated that Abu Dhabi is the richest city in the world.
In 1962, the company discovered the Bu Hasa field and ADMA followed in 1965 with the discovery of the Zakum offshore field. Today, in addition to the oil fields mentioned, the main producing fields onshore are Asab, Sahil and Shah, and offshore are al-Bunduq, and Abu al-Bukhoosh.
Most of Abu Dhabi is located on the island itself, but it has many suburbs on the mainland for example: Khalifa City A,B and C, Al Raha Beach, Al Bahia City A,B and C, Al Shahama, Al Rahba, Between Two Bridges, Baniyas and Mussafah Residential.
Abu Dhabi has a hot arid climate. Sunny blue skies can be expected throughout the year. The months of June through September are generally hot and humid with maximum temperatures averaging above . During this time, sandstorms also occur intermittently, in some cases reducing visibility down to a few meters.
The weather is cooler from November to March. This period also sees dense fog on some days. The oasis city of Al-Ain, about away, bordering Oman, regularly records the highest summer temperatures in the country; however, the dry desert air and cooler evenings make it a traditional retreat from the intense summer heat and year-round humidity of the capital city.
The total number of members of the Executive Council has been slimmed down to 98 since the succession and it now consists largely of prominent members of the ruling family as well as a number of respected politicians.
The emirates maintain their hereditary rulers who, as a group, form the UAE’s Supreme Council of Rulers, headed by the president. Although the presidency is renewable every five years through a vote in the council, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan held the presidency from the formation of the UAE until his death in November 2004, and there is an implicit understanding that Abu Dhabi’s ruler will always be elected president.
At a federal level, laws must be ratified by the Supreme Council. The Council of Ministers forms the executive authority of the state. This 20-member cabinet is headed by the president’s chosen prime minister, a post currently held by Dubai’s ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. The cabinet also refers to the Federal National Council (FNC), a 40-member consultative body to which each emirate appoints a certain number of members. In the case of Abu Dhabi, this is eight. The procedures for appointment to the FNC have recently been amended so that each emirate must now select its representatives through an electoral body. The size of each electoral authority must be 100 times greater than the number of representatives it appoints. Half the members of each electoral body will be selected by the ruler of the emirate while the other half will be directly elected by residents of the emirate. These amendments are considered to be the first step in a wider electoral reform program which will see greater representation at a federal level.
The website is designed as a service oriented portal with the objective of hosting government online services, delivering up-to-date information and providing a platform for interaction between the government and society. More than 50 interactive and transactional services are currently provided through the Abu Dhabi e-Government Gateway. The information & service gateway is also empowered by a multi-layered geographic map of Abu Dhabi, which allows the user to view the map based on his area of interest. The search and directory services on the portal cover a large diversity of information including schools, medical facilities, hotels, restaurants, events, trade names among others. Transactional services such as paying traffic fines, applying for fishing licence or requesting Property Certificates require secure authentication via Emirates ID (EIDA-card) and PIN.
The density of Abu Dhabi varies, with high employment density in the central area, high residential densities in central downtown and lower densities in the suburbs. In the dense areas, most of the concentration is achieved with medium- and high-rise buildings. Abu Dhabi's skyscrapers such as the notable Abu Dhabi Investment Authority Tower, the National Bank of Abu Dhabi headquarters, the Hilton Hotel Tower and the Etisalat headquarters are usually found in the financial districts of Abu Dhabi. Other notable modern buildings include the Emirates Palace with its design inspired by Arab heritage, and the www.visitabudhabi.com
The development of tall buildings has been encouraged in the Abu Dhabi Plan 2030, which will lead to the construction of many new skyscrapers over the next decade, particularly in the expansion of Abu Dhabi's central business district such as the new developments on Al Sowwah Island and Al Reem Island. Abu Dhabi already has a number of supertall skyscrapers under construction throughout the city. Some of the tallest buildings on the skyline include the Central Market Residential Tower, the The Landmark (Abu Dhabi) and the 74-storey, Sky Tower. Also many other skyscrapers over (500 ft) are either proposed or approved and could transform the city's skyline. As of July 2008, there were 62 high-rise buildings under construction, approved for construction, or proposed for construction.
One of the most important architectural landmarks is the majestic Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque, located in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates. This masterpiece is arguably one of the most important architectural treasures of contemporary UAE society - and one of the most beautiful in the world. It was initiated by the late President of the United Arab Emirates, HH Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, fondly thought of as the father of the UAE.
Its design and construction 'unites the world', using artisans and materials from many countries including Italy, Germany, Morocco, India, Turkey, Iran, China, United Kingdom, New Zealand, Greece and of course the United Arab Emirates. More than 3,000 workers and 38 renowned contracting companies took part in the construction of the Mosque! Natural materials were chosen for much of its design and construction due to their long-lasting qualities, including marble, stone, gold, semi-precious stones, crystals and ceramics. Construction began on November 5, 1996. The maximum capacity is approximately 41,000 people and the overall structure is 22,412 square metres and although still under completion, the internal prayer halls were initially opened in December 2007.
As one of the most visited buildings in the UAE, the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Center was established to manage the day to day operations, as a place of worship and Friday gathering and also a centre of learning and discovery through its education and visitor programs. Persons planning a visit the mosque can go to www.szgmc.ae for all the information they require.
The UAE’s large hydrocarbon wealth gives it one of the highest GDP per capita in the world and Abu Dhabi owns the majority of these resources – 95% of the oil and 6% of gas. Abu Dhabi thus holds 9% of the world’s proven oil reserves (98.2bn barrels) and almost 5% of the world’s natural gas (5.8 trillion cu metres). Oil production in the UAE was in the region of 2.3m barrels per day (bpd) in 2010, and projects are in progress to boost production to 3m bpd. In recent years the focus has turned to gas as increasing domestic consumption for power, desalination and reinjection of gas into oil fields increases demand. Gas extraction is not without its difficulties, however, as demonstrated by the sour gas project at Shah where the gas is rich in hydrogen sulphide content and is expensive to develop and process.
Recently the government has been diversifying their economic plans. Served by high oil prices, the country’s non oil and gas GDP has outstripped that attributable to the energy sector. Remarkably, non oil and gas GDP now constitutes 64% of the UAE’s total GDP. This trend is reflected in Abu Dhabi with substantial new investment in industry, real estate, tourism and retail. As Abu Dhabi is the largest oil producer of the UAE, it has reaped the most benefits from this trend. It has taken on an active diversification and liberalisation programme to reduce the UAE’s reliance on the hydrocarbon sector. This is evident in the emphasis on industrial diversification with the completion of an industrial free zone, Industrial City of Abu Dhabi, and the construction of another, ICAD II, in the pipeline. There has also been a drive to promote the tourism and real estate sectors with the Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority and the Tourism and Development Investment Company undertaking several large-scale development projects. These projects will be served by an improved transport infrastructure with a new port, an expanded airport and a proposed rail link between Abu Dhabi and Dubai all in the development stages.
Abu Dhabi is the wealthiest emirate of the UAE in terms of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and per capita income. More than $1 trillion is invested worldwide in this city alone. The GDP per capita also reached $63,000, which is far above the average income of the United Arab Emirates and which ranks third in the world after Luxembourg and Norway. Abu Dhabi is also planning many future projects sharing with the Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf (GCC) and taking 29% of all the GCC future plannings. The United Arab Emirates is a fast-growing economy: in 2006 the per capita income grew by 9%, providing a GDP per capita of $49,700 and ranking third in the world at purchasing power parity. Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA), currently estimated at US$ 875 billion, is the world's wealthiest sovereign fund in terms of total asset value. Etihad Airways maintains its headquarters in Abu Dhabi.
Abu Dhabi's government is looking to expand revenue from oil and gas production to tourism and other sorts of features which would attract different types of people. This goal is seen in the amount of attention Abu Dhabi is giving to its International Airport. The airport, in 2009, experienced a 30%+ growth in passenger usage. This idea of diversification of the economy is also seen in the Abu Dhabi Economic Vision 2030 planned by the Abu Dhabi Urban Planning Council. In this plan Abu Dhabi's economy will be sustainable and not be dependent on any one facet or source of revenue. More specifically the non-oil portion of income is planned to be increased from about 40% to about 60%.
The city's per capita electricity consumption is about 41,000 kWh and the total supplied is 8,367 MW as of 2007. The distribution of electricity is carried out by companies run by SCIPCO Power and APC Energy. The Abu Dhabi Fire Service runs 13 fire stations that attend about 2,000 fire and rescue calls per year.
State-owned Etisalat and private du communication companies provide telephone and cell phone service to the city. Cellular coverage is extensive, and both GSM and CDMA (from Etisalat and Du) services are available. Etisalat, the government owned telecommunications provider, held a virtual monopoly over telecommunication services in Abu Dhabi prior to the establishment of other, smaller telecommunications companies such as Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company (EITC — better known as Du) in 2006. Internet was introduced into Abu Dhabi in 1995. The current network is supported by a bandwidth of 6 GB, with 50,000 dialup and 150,000 broadband ports. Etisalat recently announced implememnting a fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) network in Abu Dhabi during the third quarter of 2009 to make the emirate the world's first city to have such a network.
The city was planned in the 1970s for an estimated maximum population of 600,000. In accordance with what was considered to be ideal urban planning at the time, the city has wide grid-pattern roads, and high-density tower blocks. On the northerly end of the island, where the population density is highest, the main streets are lined with 20- to 30-story towers. Inside this rectangle of towers is a normal grid pattern of roads with lower density buildings (2-story villas or 6-story low-rise buildings).
Abu Dhabi is a modern city with broad boulevards, tall office and apartment buildings, and busy shops. Principal thoroughfares are the Corniche, Airport Road, Sheikh Zayed Street, Hamdan Street and Khalifa Street. Abu Dhabi is known in the region for its greenery; the former desert strip today includes numerous parks and gardens. The design of the inner city roads and main roads are quite organised. Starting from the Corniche, all horizontal streets are oddly and the vertical ones evenly numbered. Thus, the Corniche is Street #1, Khalifa is Street #3, Hamdan is Street #5, and so on. Conversely, Salam Street is St #8.
Mail is generally delivered to post-office boxes only; however, there is door-to-door delivery for commercial organizations. There are many parks throughout the city. Entrance is usually free for children, however there is often an entrance fee for adults. The Corniche, the city's seaside promenade, is about in length, with gardens, playgrounds, and a BMX/skateboard ring.
In 2007 the Abu Dhabi Urban Planning Council (UPC) was established, which is the agency responsible for the future of Abu Dhabi’s urban environments and the expert authority behind the visionary Plan Abu Dhabi 2030 Urban Structure Framework Plan that was published in September 2007. The UPC is also working on similar plans for the regions of Al-Ain and Al-Gharbia.
Because of the rapid development of Abu Dhabi, a number of challenges to the city's urban organization have developed, among them:
According to the Abu Dhabi Department of Planning and Economy, in 2006 the population of the emirate was 1,463,491.
As the emirate covers , nearly 87% of the UAE, the population density is .
Abu Dhabi also ranks as the 26th most expensive city in the world, and the second most in the region behind Dubai.
As of 2001, 25.6% of the population of the emirate was made up of UAE nationals. Approximately 74.4% of the population was expatriates. The median age in the emirate was about 30.1 years. The crude birth rate, as of 2005, was 13.6%, while the crude death rate was about 2%.
Article 7 of the UAE's Provisional Constitution declares Islam the official state religion of the UAE. The government subsidizes almost 95% of mosques and employs all imams.
The majority of the inhabitants of Abu Dhabi are expatriate workers from India, Pakistan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Philippines, the United Kingdom and various countries from across the Arab world. Consequently, English, Hindi, Urdu, Tamil, Somali, Tigrinya, Amharic and Bengali are widely spoken. Apart from Urdu and Hindi spoken by Indians and Pakistanis, many South Asian expatriates also contribute other South Asian languages to the cultural milieu, including Malayalam, the main language spoken in the state of Kerala.
The native-born population are Arabic-speaking Gulf Arabs who are part of a clan-based society. The Al Nahyan family, part of the al-Falah branch of the Bani Yas clan, rules the emirate and has a central place in society.
Abu Dhabi International Airport (AUH) is the city's main aviation hub and the second busiest airport in the UAE, serving 9.02 million passengers in 2008, up 30.2% on 2007. Its terminal spaces are dominated by Etihad Airways which is the UAE's national carrier and the country's second largest airline. A new terminal opened in 2009 with total capacity reaching 12 million passengers per annum by 2011. Development work has also started on a new passenger terminal, to be situated between the two runways and known as the Midfield Terminal. The new mega-midfield terminal complex will be capable of handling an additional 20 million passengers a year initially and then later, as Abu Dhabi develops as a major Middle East transport hub, up to 50 million passengers a year, thus providing a major competition to Dubai International Airport. The terminal will initially include 42 gates, rising to more than 90 gates on completion of the airport.
Public transport systems in Abu Dhabi include the Abu Dhabi public buses, taxis, ferries, and airplanes. White-and-mustard metered taxis traverse most of the city in UAE. Currently newer silver-colored taxis are coming in, while the old mustard-colored ones are being phased out. Abu Dhabi has about 8,000 old bronze/yellow/gold & white taxis, which will be phased out from 2008 to 2010.
The first town bus entered service in about 1969 but this was all part of a very informal service. On 30 June 2008 the Department of Transport began public bus service in Abu Dhabi with four routes. In an attempt to entice people to use the bus system, all routes were zero-fare until the end of 2008. The four routes, which operate between 6 am and midnight every day, run at a frequency of 10 to 20 minutes. Within the first week of service, the bus network had seen high ridership. Some of the buses, which have a maximum capacity of 45 passengers, only had room for standing left. Some bus drivers reported as many as 100 passengers on a bus at one time. Although the new, zero-fare bus service has been a success, many taxi drivers are losing business. Taxi drivers have seen a considerable decrease in the demand for taxis while lines were forming for the buses. The service steadily expanded and by the end of 2008, 230 buses were in service. In 2009, the Department of Transport plans to have 21 bus routes in the city, operated by 820 buses. A total of 1,360 buses are expected to be in operation by 2010.
A massive expansion of public transport is anticipated within the framework of the government's Surface Transport Master Plan 2030. The expansion is expected to see of metro and of tramways and/or bus rapid transit (BRT) routes.
This unique socioeconomic development in the Persian Gulf has meant that Abu Dhabi is generally more tolerant than its neighbours. While Islam is the main religion, Emaritis have been known for their tolerance; Christian churches, Hindu temples, and Sikh gurdwaras can be found alongside mosques. The country is home to several communities that have faced persecution elsewhere. The cosmopolitan atmosphere is gradually growing and as a result, there are a variety of Asian and Western schools, cultural centers and themed restaurants.
Abu Dhabi is home to a number of cultural institutions including the Cultural Foundation and the National Theater. The Cultural Foundation, while closed for reconstruction as of spring 2011, is home to the UAE Public Library and Cultural Center. Various cultural societies such as the Abu Dhabi Classical Music Society have a strong and visible following in the city. The recently launched Emirates Foundation offers grants in support of the arts, as well as to advance science and technology, education, environmental protection and social development. The International Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF) will be based in Abu Dhabi. The city also stages hundreds of conferences and exhibitions each year in its state-of-the-art venues, including the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (ADNEC) which is the Persian Gulf's largest exhibition center and welcomes around 1.8 million visitors every year.
The Red Bull Air Race World Series has been a spectacular sporting staple for the city for many years, bringing tens of thousands to the waterfront. Another major event is the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (ADIPEC).
The diversity of cuisine in Abu Dhabi is a reflection of the cosmopolitan nature of the society. Arab food is very popular and is available everywhere in the city, from the small shawarma to the upscale restaurants in the city's many hotels. Fast food and South Asian cuisine are also very popular and are widely available. The sale and consumption of pork, though not illegal, is regulated and it is sold only to non-Muslims in designated areas. Similarly, the sale of alcoholic beverages is regulated. A liquor permit is required to purchase alcohol; however, alcohol is available in bars and restaurants within four or five star hotels but is not sold as widely as in its liberal neighbour Dubai. Shisha and qahwa boutiques are also popular in Abu Dhabi.
Poetry in Abu Dhabi and the UAE is highly regarded and often is centric around the themes of satire, religion, family, chivalry and love. According to an article from an Abu Dhabi tourism page, sheikhs, teachers, sailors and princes make a large bulk of the poets within the UAE. A unique form of poetry to the UAE was formed in the 8th century by Al Khalil bin Ahmed and it was written in 16 meters. The first known poet from the UAE, Ibn Majid, was born sometime between 1432 and 1437 in Ras Al Khaimah. According to the tourism page Majid came from a family of sailors and 40 of his works have survived. Another Emeriti poet, Ibn Daher is from the 17th century. Daher is important because he used Nabati poetry (AKA Bedouin poetry), poetry written in the vernacular instead of the classical/religious Arabic. Other important poets from the UAE are Mubarak Al Oqaili (1880–1954), Salem bin Ali al Owais (1887–1959) and Ahmed bin Sulayem (1905–1976). These poets made headway in the field of Classical Arabic poetry as opposed to the Nabati poetry of the 17th century.
One of Ibn Masjid’s most prominent works is a book called, Kitab al-Fawa’id fi Usul ‘Ilm al-Bahr wa ’l-Qawa’id (Book of Useful Information on the Principles and Rules of Navigation), and it was written in 1490. This book is effectually an encyclopedia about navigation and sailing in and around the Indian Ocean. Masjid also goes into detail about the intricacies and technologies of the Arab sailing techniques. An excerpt from his book is as follows:
Today in Abu Dhabi there is a group called the Abu Dhabi Cultural Foundation that works to preserve the art and culture of the city. According to an article from the English Pen Atlas Al jawaher wal la'li was the first manuscript to come out of the UAE. According to another article this book was written in the 1990s and was banned in the city for some time for making accusations about the ruling family.
Abu Dhabi is home to several international and local private schools and universities, including government-sponsored United Arab Emirates University in Al-Ain, Higher Colleges of Technology and New York Film Academy, Paris-Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi and Abu Dhabi University in Abu Dhabi. These boast several languages that make up the population of the city. A large number of schools target the expatriate population by following the same syllabi as in their native countries. For e.g.: The Abu Dhabi Indian School follows the CBSE Indian syllabus. INSEAD, the prestigious international business school, has established a campus in February 2010, offering an Executive MBA and executive education courses. New York University opened a government-sponsored satellite campus in Abu Dhabi in September 2010.
Abu Dhabi Education Council (ADEC) maintains a comprehensive after-school program for interested and talented Jiu-Jitsu students. The Abu Dhabi Jiu-Jitsu Schools Program began in 2008 under the patronage of H.H. Sheikh Zayed Bin Mohammed Al Nahyan, who is a keen Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu competitor. The program launched in 14 schools for pupils in grades 6 and 7, and has since expanded to 42 government schools, with 81 Brazilian coaches brought in as instructors.
The students aged from 9 to 13 years old are taught Brazilian Jiu-jitsu as part of the curriculum. The plan is for up to 500 schools to be participating in the School-Jitsu program by 2015. The project was set up by special request of HH Sheikh Mohammad bin Zayed Al Nahyan to the head coach of the Emirates Jiu-jitsu team Carlos Santos, now also the managing director of the School-Jitsu Project.
Abu Dhabi provides a free scholarship program to students through The Petroleum Institute.www.pi.ac.ae. It is considered one of the best engineering colleges in UAE. It is being launched by ADNOC (Abu Dhabi National Oil Company) and offers degrees in Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical, Petroleum, Reservoir and other engineering sectors. A notable aspect of the Petroleum Institute is that after graduation, they trained their students on their petroleum rigs provided them jobs in oil companies. The Petroleum Institute is one of the few higher education Institutions to offer students such job security. Every year in the season of admissions an exhibition is launched in Abu Dhabi Exhibition Center under the supervision of the government.Universities from every corner of the world exhibit their career programs and scholarship programs for globally bright students.This seems to be a well defined platform for the students of all nationalities.Univrsity of Heriot Watt,University of Bolton,Cambridge university,Oxford university,The Petroluem institute,Khalifa University and Abu dhabi University.
Bethlehem, Palestinian National Authority>Palestinian Authority | * Madrid, Spain (2007) | * Houston, Texas, United States (2002) | Brisbane, Australia (since 2009) | * Islamabad, Pakistan | * Minsk, Belarus (since 2007) | * Nicosia, Cyprus (since 2004) | * Iquique, Chile | * Roskilde, Denmark (since 2011) |
Category:Capitals in Asia Category:Metropolitan areas of the United Arab Emirates Category:Populated coastal places in the United Arab Emirates Category:Populated places in the United Arab Emirates
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name | Lewis Hamilton |
---|---|
nationality | British |
birth date | January 07, 1985 |
2011 team | McLaren–Mercedes |
2011 car number | 3 |
races | 83 |
championships | 1 () |
wins | 16 |
podiums | 40 |
poles | 18 |
points | 642 |
fastest laps | 10 |
first race | 2007 Australian Grand Prix |
first win | 2007 Canadian Grand Prix |
last win | 2011 German Grand Prix |
last race | |
last season | 2010 |
last position | 4th (240 points) }} |
Hamilton was born in Stevenage, Hertfordshire. In December 1995, at the age of ten, he approached McLaren team principal Ron Dennis at the Autosport Awards ceremony and told him, "I want to race for you one day ... I want to race for McLaren." Less than three years later McLaren and Mercedes-Benz signed him to their Young Driver Support Programme. After winning the British Formula Renault, Formula Three Euroseries, and GP2 championships on his way up the racing career ladder, he drove for McLaren in 2007, making his Formula One debut 12 years after his initial encounter with Dennis. Coming from a mixed-race background, with a black father and white mother, Hamilton is often labelled "the first black driver in Formula One".
In his first season in Formula One, Hamilton set numerous records, while finishing second in the 2007 Formula One Championship, just one point behind Kimi Räikkönen. He won the World Championship the following season, ahead of Felipe Massa by the same margin of a single point. Clinching the crown thanks to passing the dry tyre-shod Timo Glock in the wet on the final lap, to take the necessary fifth position. Following that, prestigious motorsport weekly Autosport dubbed him as Last Lap Lewis. He has stated he wants to stay with the McLaren team for the rest of his F1 career.
Following his 2008 title Hamilton struggled with less competitive McLarens, in spite of taking quite a few Grand Prix wins he was not able to challenge for the 2009 championship, and finished a close fourth in 2010, being in mathematical contention until the final round.
Hamilton's father bought him a radio-controlled car in 1991, which gave him his first taste of racing competition. Hamilton finished second in the national BRCA championship the following year. He said of the time: "I was racing these remote-controlled cars and winning club championships against adults". As a result of this his father bought him his first go-kart as a Christmas present at the age of six. His father told him that he would support his racing career as long as he worked hard at school. Supporting his son became problematic, which caused him to take redundancy from his position as an IT Manager and became a contractor. He was sometimes employed in up to three jobs at a time, while still managing to find enough time to attend all Hamilton's races. He later set up his own computer company as well as working as a full-time manager for Hamilton. Hamilton is now managed by Simon Fuller.
Hamilton was educated at The John Henry Newman School, a voluntary aided Catholic secondary school in Stevenage, Hertfordshire. Alongside his interest for racing, he played football for his school team with current Aston Villa and England international midfielder Ashley Young. Hamilton said that if Formula One had not worked for him he would have been a footballer, being a big fan of Arsenal F.C or a cricketer, having played both for his school teams as a youngster. He subsequently attended, in February 2001, Cambridge Arts and Sciences (CATS), a private sixth-form college in Cambridge. At the age of five Hamilton took up Karate in order to defend himself as a result of bullying at school.
In October 2007, Hamilton announced his intention to live in Switzerland, stating that this was because he wished to get away from the media scrutiny that he experienced living in the United Kingdom. Hamilton admitted under questioning on the television show Parkinson, which was broadcast on 10 November 2007, that taxation was partly responsible for his decision, in addition to wanting more privacy. Hamilton received public criticism from UK MPs including Liberal Democrat MP Bob Russell for avoiding UK taxes. He settled in Luins in Vaud canton on Lake Geneva; other Formula One drivers, including world champions Michael Schumacher, Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso, also live in Switzerland. Hamilton was one of several super-rich figures whose tax arrangements were singled out for criticism in a report by the charity Christian Aid in 2008.
On 18 December 2007, Hamilton was suspended from driving in France for a month after being caught speeding at on a French motorway. His Mercedes-Benz CLK was also impounded. In November 2007, Hamilton started dating Nicole Scherzinger, the lead singer of the American girl band Pussycat Dolls; it was announced in January 2010 that they split up to focus on their respective careers, however they were seen together at the 2010 Turkish Grand Prix and at the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal, on 13 June 2010.
Hamilton was awarded an MBE by the Queen in the 2009 New Year Honours.
On 18 March 2009, Madame Tussauds unveiled a waxwork of Hamilton in his Vodafone McLaren Mercedes race suit. This wax replica cost around £150,000 and took over six months to complete.
Two days before the 2010 Australian Grand Prix, Victoria Police witnessed Hamilton "deliberately losing traction" in his silver Mercedes-AMG C63, and impounded the car for 48 hours. Hamilton immediately released a statement of apology for "driving in an over-exuberant manner". After being charged with intentionally losing control of a vehicle, Hamilton was eventually fined A$500 (£288), being described as a "Hoon" [boy racer] by the magistrate.
In July 2011 the father of Nicole Scherzinger announced that Hamilton and his daughter were engaged to be married. However, this was denied shortly after by Scherzinger on Twitter.
In 2001, Michael Schumacher made a one-off return to karts and competed against Hamilton along with other future F1 drivers Vitantonio Liuzzi and Nico Rosberg. Hamilton ended the final in seventh, four places behind Schumacher. Although the two saw little of each other on the track Schumacher praised the young Briton (see quote box).
Later in 2004 Williams would announce that they had come close to signing him but were refused the opportunity due to BMW, their engine supplier at the time, refusing to fund Hamilton's career. Hamilton eventually re-signed with McLaren, and made his debut with Manor in the 2004 Formula 3 Euro Series. They won one race and Hamilton ended the year fifth in the championship. He also won the Bahrain F3 Superprix and raced one of the Macau F3 Grand Prix. Hamilton first tested for McLaren in late 2004 at Silverstone.
Hamilton moved to the reigning Euro Series champions ASM for the 2005 season and dominated the championship, winning 15 of the 20 rounds. This would have been 16 but for being disqualified from one win at Spa-Francorchamps on a technical infringement that caught out several other drivers. He also won the Marlboro Masters of Formula 3 at Zandvoort. After the season British magazine Autosport featured him in their "Top 50 Drivers of 2005" issue, ranking Hamilton 24th.
His performances included a dominant win at the Nürburgring, despite serving a penalty for speeding in the pit lane. At his home race at Silverstone, supporting the , Hamilton overtook two rivals at Becketts, a series of high-speed (up to 150 mph in a GP2 car) bends where overtaking is rare. In Istanbul he recovered from a spin that left him in eighteenth place to take second position in the final corners. He won the title in unusual circumstances, inheriting the final point he needed after Giorgio Pantano was stripped of fastest lap in the Monza feature race. In the sprint race, though he finished second with Piquet sixth, he finished twelve points clear of his rival.
His 2006 GP2 championship coincided with a vacancy at McLaren following the departure of Juan Pablo Montoya to NASCAR and Kimi Räikkönen to Ferrari. After months of speculation on whether Hamilton, Pedro de la Rosa or Gary Paffett would be paired with defending champion Fernando Alonso for , Hamilton was confirmed as the team's second driver. He was told of McLaren's decision on 30 September, but the news was not made public until 24 November, for fear that it would be overshadowed by Michael Schumacher's retirement announcement.
Hamilton finished second behind Alonso at Monaco and afterwards suggested he was prevented from racing his team mate. The FIA cleared McLaren following an investigation. Hamilton had both his first pole position and first victory of his F1 career in the at Montreal. He led for most of the race even after the safety car was deployed four times increasing the chances of him being overtaken. A week later Hamilton won the , also from pole position, becoming the first Briton since John Watson in 1983 to win an F1 race in the US, and only the second person, after Jacques Villeneuve, to win more than one race in his rookie Formula One season since the first year of the Championship.
By finishing third at Magny-Cours behind Ferrari drivers Kimi Räikkönen and Felipe Massa, Hamilton extended his lead in the Driver's Championship to 14 points. This was the first time in his F1 career he finished a race in a lower position than he started, and the first time he had been passed on the race track in Formula One. He took pole at his home Grand Prix at Silverstone and led for the first 16 laps, but slipped to third, 40 seconds behind Räikkönen and Alonso.
During qualifying for the , Hamilton crashed at the Schumacher chicane after a problem with the wheel nut caused by the air gun used on his car. He was taken to the circuit's medical centre on a stretcher with an oxygen mask and drip, but was conscious throughout. He was unable to complete qualifying and his existing laptime was surpassed by all other competitors during Q3, thus he qualified in tenth position. After a final medical check on Sunday morning, Hamilton was cleared to race. During a heavy rainstorm which caused the race to be red-flagged Hamilton slid off into a gravel trap, however as he kept his engine running he was lifted back on to the circuit and able to rejoin the race after the restart. His ninth place finish in this race was his first non-podium and non-points finish, enabling title contenders Alonso and Massa to reduce Hamilton's championship lead.
Hamilton won the from pole position following a controversial qualifying session. Alonso had set the fastest time, but was relegated five places down the grid to sixth for preventing Hamilton to leave the pit lane in time to complete his final qualifying lap. Kimi Räikkönen stayed within five seconds of Hamilton for the entire race (excluding pit stop periods). McLaren were docked any constructor's points earned during the race due to the incident in qualifying.
After declaring he had restored his relationship with Alonso, Hamilton qualified second in Turkey. After dropping to third at the first corner, Hamilton looked set for a podium finish with 15 laps remaining, but a right-front tyre puncture forced him to crawl back to the pits, leaving him to finish fifth meaning his championship lead was cut once more.
Alonso beat Hamilton in the Italian and Belgian Grands Prix, leaving Hamilton with a two-point lead in the title race. However he extended his lead to 12 points after winning the in heavy rain after Alonso crashed. Following the race Hamilton was investigated by the race stewards over his involvement in an incident behind the safety car, which saw both Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber crash out of the race while following the McLaren. The trio were cleared on the Friday of the weekend.
After securing pole position in China, which saw changeable weather conditions, Hamilton retired from the race. He experienced considerable tyre wear, notably his right rear, and he ran wide into the gravel trap in the pitlane where his car beached, recording the first retirement of his Formula One career. It was later revealed that Bridgestone became unnerved at the glaringly worn tyres and advised McLaren to order him to make a pit stop, which McLaren refused to do, believing it would be counterproductive. Hamilton himself couldn't tell the full extent of the tyre problem as raindrops were in his wing mirrors. Hamilton thus went into the final race of the season four and seven points ahead of Alonso and Räikkönen respectively.
In the he failed to finish in a championship-winning position, finishing the race in seventh after being as low as 18th place during the race, due to two incidents. In the first he was passed by Räikkönen away from the line before being boxed in by Massa and Räikkönen into the first corner, and 'wrong-footed' by Räikkönen mid-corner, Hamilton was passed by Alonso in Turn 3. Hamilton attempted to re-pass Alonso in turn four, but ran wide, dropping four places to eighth. The second problem started on lap 9 when Hamilton encountered a gearbox problem, which meant that he was stuck in neutral and could not select any gears. The gearbox became operational again after Hamilton switched settings on his steering wheel, but he lost 40 seconds while his car was coasting. For most of the race, Massa was leading with Räikkönen in second. If this had been the case come the chequered flag with Hamilton in seventh place, Hamilton would have become world champion. After the second round of pit stops, Räikkönen stayed out a couple of laps longer than Massa and took the lead. Once in front Räikkönen made no mistakes in the remaining laps and won the race to become the Formula One world champion.
On 21 October 2007 it was announced that the FIA were investigating BMW Sauber and Williams for fuel irregularities, the BMW drivers had finished in fifth and sixth place, and if they were to be excluded Hamilton would be promoted to fifth and would win the 2007 Drivers World Championship by one point over Räikkönen. Ultimately no penalty whatsoever was given to any team as there was "sufficient doubt as to render it inappropriate to impose a penalty", though McLaren officially appealed this decision. Hamilton subsequently told the BBC he does not want to win an F1 title through the disqualifications of other drivers. A precedent had been set in 1995 when Michael Schumacher, then of Benetton-Renault, and David Coulthard, then of Williams-Renault, were both found guilty of possessing illegal fuel in their cars and in that situation both drivers were initially docked drivers points, but for unspecified reasons it would transpire over a week later that constructor points would be docked instead.
Ahead of the world championship finale, Hamilton answered a question about what it would mean to him to become the first black champion, saying: "It will show that not only white people can do it, but also black people, Indians, Japanese and Chinese. It will be good to mean something." Having made few public remarks about his ethnicity since becoming an F1 driver, Hamilton added: "Outside of Formula One my heroes are foremost my father, then Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King. Being black is not a negative. It's a positive, if anything, because I'm different. In the future it can open doors to different cultures and that is what motor sport is trying to do anyway".
Hamilton's relationship with McLaren team boss Ron Dennis dates back to 1995, with the first indication that Hamilton was unhappy with his team appearing after he finished second at Monaco in 2007. After post-race comments made by Hamilton which suggested he had been forced into a supporting role, the FIA initiated an inquiry to determine whether McLaren had broken rules by enforcing team orders. McLaren denied favouring double world champion Fernando Alonso, and the FIA subsequently vindicated the team, stating that: "McLaren were able to pursue an optimum team strategy because they had a substantial advantage over all other cars. They did nothing which could be described as interfering with the race result".
The tensions within the team surfaced again at the 2007 Hungarian Grand Prix. During the final qualifying session for the race Hamilton was delayed in the pits by Alonso and thus unable to set a final lap time before the end of the session. McLaren pointed out that Hamilton had disobeyed an earlier instruction to let Alonso pass in qualifying, for fear of losing his own position. Alonso was relegated to sixth place on the starting grid, thus elevating Hamilton (who had originally qualified second) to first, while McLaren were docked constructors championship points. Hamilton said he thought Alonso's penalty was "quite light if anything" and only regretted the loss of constructors' points. Hamilton was reported to have sworn at Dennis on the team radio following the incident. British motorsport journal Autosport claimed that this "[led] Dennis to throw his headphones on the pit wall in disgust (a gesture that was misinterpreted by many to be in reaction to Alonso's pole)". However McLaren later issued a statement on behalf of Hamilton which denied the use of any profanity. As a result of these events, the relationship between Hamilton and Alonso temporarily collapsed, with the pair not on speaking terms for a short period. In the aftermath it was reported that Hamilton had been targeted by Luca Cordero di Montezemolo regarding a Ferrari drive for .
Following the stewards' investigation into the incident at the 2007 Japanese Grand Prix, Alonso stated: "I'm not thinking of this championship anymore, it's been decided off the track. The drivers' briefing has no purpose. You go there to hear what Charlie Whiting and the other officials say. Twenty one drivers have an opinion, Charlie and the officials another, and so it's like talking to a wall".
The rivalry between Hamilton and teammate Alonso led to speculation that one of the pair would leave McLaren at the end of the 2007 season and Alonso and McLaren subsequently terminated their contract by mutual consent on 2 November 2007.
On 14 December 2007, it was confirmed that Heikki Kovalainen who drove for Renault in 2007 would drive the second car for McLaren-Mercedes for the 2008 Formula One season alongside Hamilton. In January 2008, Hamilton signed a new five-year multi-million pound contract to stay with McLaren-Mercedes until the end of the 2012 season.
Hamilton won the first race of the 2008 season, the , having qualified on pole position. In Malaysia, he finished fifth after duels with Mark Webber and Jarno Trulli. He had been demoted to ninth on the grid, from fourth, for impeding Nick Heidfeld's flying lap. In Bahrain, Hamilton destroyed his car during a practice crash. He continued with a spare chassis and took third place in qualifying. In the race, after a bad start, he crashed into the back of Alonso's Renault finishing 13th. This led to him being overtaken in the Drivers' Championship by Kimi Räikkönen and Nick Heidfeld. He was back on the podium in Spain finishing third from fifth on the grid. Hamilton finished second in Turkey, and won the a fortnight later, putting him in the lead of the championship.
He achieved his eighth career pole position in Montreal but he crashed into the back of Räikkönen during the race, after failing to see that the Finn was waiting at a red light at the end of the pit lane. Both cars were forced to retire and Hamilton was given a 10 position grid penalty for the next race, the , as a result of this incident. At that race, Hamilton overtook Sebastian Vettel at the chicane on lap 1 but missed the apex and was given a drive through penalty which he served on lap 13, finishing the race in 13th. Despite an error in qualifying that saw him start fourth on the grid, Hamilton went on to win the in difficult, wet conditions. His performance was stated as being one of his best drives to date. Hamilton himself said in the post race press conference that it was his most difficult and most meaningful win.
In the next race at Hockenheim, Hamilton started from pole position, building up an 11 second lead over second-placed Felipe Massa early in the race. After stopping and re-emerging in the lead, McLaren then decided to keep Hamilton out on-track when the safety car was deployed mid-way through the race. When Hamilton finally pitted, he came out in fifth place, jumping to third after his team-mate let him by and Nick Heidfeld pitted. He then overtook Massa and Nelson Piquet, Jr. for the lead, eventually winning by 9 seconds.
Hamilton won the on the road, however he was later judged to have gained an unfair advantage by cutting a chicane when he used a tarmac run off area to avoid hitting Kimi Räikkönen. McLaren said that their telemetry showed Hamilton backed off to let Räikkönen past but Hamilton was given a 25 second penalty, thereby dropping him to third. As a result his main title rival Massa inherited the win. Hamilton's lead in the drivers' championship was cut to two points, and a subsequent appeal by McLaren to the FIA World Motor Sport Council was rejected on the grounds that the case was inadmissible. The Italian Grand Prix was won by Sebastian Vettel in the Toro Rosso. Both Massa and Hamilton failed to capitalise on the weather and each other's poor grid positions finishing sixth and seventh respectively. This result cut Hamilton's lead in the Championship to one point. Hamilton finished third at the next race in Singapore, while Massa failed to score any points, allowing Hamilton to increase his championship lead to seven points.
At Fuji, Hamilton took pole in qualifying. His closest rival for the Championship title, Felipe Massa, could only manage to qualify fifth. As the race began Kimi Räikkönen made a good start from second position, getting ahead of pole-sitter Hamilton. Hamilton moved down the inside before the first corner, out-braking himself and running wide. This forced some of the drivers behind him to go off the track, including the cars of Räikkönen and Heikki Kovalainen, for which Hamilton was given a drive-through penalty. A second incident followed soon afterwards, on the second lap, when Hamilton attempted to pass Massa into the chicane at turn 10. Hamilton pulled alongside the Ferrari and as Massa ran wide into the corner, Hamilton made a move to pass him. Massa then ran up inside Hamilton and the cars collided at the second bend of the chicane, pushing the McLaren into a spin. Massa was later given a drive-through penalty for this move. Hamilton, who had been in sixth place behind Massa, dropped down to last place but managed to regain some places and managed to finish the race in 12th position. However Massa finished seventh after being given an extra point after a penalty was given to Toro Rosso's Sébastien Bourdais. This meant that with just two races to go Hamilton led the World Championship by five points from Massa.
At the penultimate race of the season, the , Hamilton was much faster than all the other cars in the practice sessions, and qualified on pole position. He went on to win the race from Felipe Massa and Kimi Räikkönen, taking a 7 point lead in the World Championship into the last race of the season. Speaking afterwards, Hamilton said "All weekend we have had God on our side as always, and the team did a phenomenal job in preparing the car, which has been a dream to drive." Hamilton needed to finish at least fifth in the to secure the World Championship. After a hard fought race Hamilton was in fifth but, after rain, and in the closing laps of the race, Sebastian Vettel of Scuderia Toro Rosso took the fifth position away from Hamilton. Had the race ended then, this would have given the driver's title to Massa.
On the final lap of the race first Vettel and then Hamilton managed to pass Timo Glock of Toyota, after Glock (unlike Hamilton) had risked staying on the track with dry-weather tyres, despite the rain. This moved Hamilton back up to fifth, ensuring that he finished one point ahead of Massa overall and winning the 2008 title. Hamilton's overtaking move happened after Massa had crossed the line to win. This meant that Hamilton had clinched the 2008 Formula One World Championship, becoming the youngest driver to win the title, as well as the first black driver. He is also the first British driver to win the World Championship since Damon Hill triumphed in 1996.
;Racial abuse On 4 February 2008, Hamilton was verbally heckled and otherwise abused during pre-season testing at the Circuit de Catalunya in Catalonia by several Spanish spectators who wore black face paint and black wigs, as well as shirts bearing the words "Hamilton's ". Hamilton became widely unpopular in Spain because of his rivalry with Spanish former team-mate Fernando Alonso. The FIA have warned Spanish authorities about the repetition of such behaviour. In reaction to this behaviour, the FIA announced on 13 February 2008 that it will launch a "Race Against Racism" campaign.
Shortly before the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix, a website owned by the Spanish branch of the New York-based advertising agency TBWA and named "pinchalaruedadeHamilton" (burst Hamilton's tyre) was featured in the British media. The website contained an animated image of Interlagos that allowed users to leave nails and porcupines on the track for Hamilton's car to run over. Among thousands of comments left since 2007, some included racial insults. His rival Fernando Alonso condemned the racist supporters.
A year after winning the 2008 Australian Grand Prix from pole position, Hamilton started the season-opening from 18th place on the grid after the McLaren team incurred a penalty for changing his malfunctioning gearbox during qualifying. Hamilton benefited from a late crash between Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel and BMW Sauber's Robert Kubica to move into fourth place by the end of the race. He was then promoted to third after Jarno Trulli was penalised for overtaking him under safety-car conditions. During a post-race stewards' hearing, Hamilton and McLaren officials told stewards they had not purposely let Trulli pass, but it was revealed by release of the McLaren race radio communication that this was not true. Hamilton was then disqualified from the race for providing "misleading evidence" during the stewards' hearing. He later privately apologised to FIA race director Charlie Whiting for having lied to the stewards.
Over the next six races, Hamilton qualified outside the top ten three more times, twice qualifying as high as fifth. He scored minor points at the Malaysian, Chinese and Bahrain Grands Prix. A chance for points, and even hopes for a podium finish came at the Nürburgring when he again qualified fifth, but a puncture on the first lap caused by a collision with Mark Webber sent him down to 19th as the McLaren limped back to the pits damaging the floor and undertray. With the car's aerodynamics damaged he finished 18th, last and the only driver in the race lapped.
Hamilton's fortunes were reversed at the Hungaroring, the tenth round of the season. A KERS-assisted start from fourth place saw him take second place by the first corner, before losing it to Mark Webber at the next turn. Hamilton repassed Webber on lap five and following Alonso's retirement on lap 13, he led the remainder of the race to finish 11.529 seconds clear of Räikkönen and take his 10th career win and the first for a KERS-equipped car. McLaren's return to form continued in Valencia, where Hamilton qualified on pole position for the first time in the season, heading a McLaren one-two with team-mate Heikki Kovalainen. In the race a poor pit stop by the mechanics lost Hamilton first place but he finished a steady second behind Rubens Barrichello's Brawn.
Hamilton crashed out of the next two races, the Belgian and Italian Grands Prix, going out of third place on the last lap of the Italian race when chasing Jenson Button for second. This mathematically eliminated his chances of defending his title. In September, at the , Hamilton took his second win of the season. He finished third at the next two races, the Japanese and Brazilian Grands Prix, starting the latter event from 17th on the grid. In the inaugural , Hamilton was quick throughout the practice sessions and qualified on pole, six tenths of a second quicker than Sebastian Vettel who was second on the grid. Hamilton led the race, but retired on lap 20 due to a rear brake problem, his first technical-related retirement in Formula One.
Kovalainen left the team at the end of the year, and like Alonso he was upset with the team's favouritism of Hamilton. According to Kovalainen, Hamilton always had priority for the newest parts, and Kovalainen was forced to carry more fuel during qualifying, reducing his qualifying times.
Hamilton finished third in Bahrain, having qualified fourth on the grid. In Australia, Hamilton failed to make the top ten in qualifying, starting the race from eleventh place on the grid. He ran as high as third, before ending the race in sixth, after a late-race collision with Mark Webber. The Malaysia saw him in the top three positions in all practice sessions, but a misjudgement on the weather by his team in qualifying, left him on tyres that were unfavourable for the wet conditions. This restricted him to 20th on the grid for the race, before he came through to finish sixth. He was given a warning during the race, after he weaved four times over a straight trying to break the tow that Vitaly Petrov was receiving and was not intending to block him. After the race the rules were clarified by stewards to only allow a driver to weave once even if they are only trying to break a tow.
Hamilton qualified in sixth position in Shanghai, making up four places in the race and achieving a second place finish, behind teammate Jenson Button. This completed the team's first 1–2 finish since the 2007 Italian Grand Prix. The race saw multiple brief periods of rain, and two safety car periods, which upset the order and resulted in many overtaking manoeuvres. Hamilton was involved in a pit lane incident with Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel, for which both later received a reprimand from race stewards, Hamilton for his second consecutive race after the Petrov incident in Malaysia. Hamilton qualified third for the , and by the end of the race he was running in second behind Mark Webber and set the fastest lap of the race on the third last lap. The next lap, he speared off into the gravel trap and came in contact with the wall, destroying the left front suspension and putting him out of the race. It appeared that his front left tyre received a puncture and blew out but it was later confirmed by McLaren that the wheel rim had failed and destroyed the tyre, sending Hamilton into the barrier. Despite running in the top three for most of the race, he was classified outside the points.
The next weekend at Monaco Hamilton qualified and finished 5th. For the , Hamilton qualified a season's best 2nd, behind Mark Webber. He was overtaken by 3rd placed Sebastian Vettel, but managed to reclaim the place soon after. Hamilton was then promoted to 1st after Vettel and Webber collided with each other on Lap 40. Hamilton's teammate, Jenson Button was then in 2nd behind him and later overtook Hamilton, but Hamilton retook the lead in the first corner after a few near collisions. Both drivers held back then and cruised to a the finish, with Hamilton taking his first victory of the 2010 season, promoting him to 3rd in the Drivers Championship.
Prior to the Turkish Grand Prix in 2010, Hamilton evidently had both of his ears pierced, as he was sporting black studs in each ear on the grid before the race, however despite FIA policy prohibiting the wearing of earrings and jewellery at grand prix, the FIA stated that they had no issue with Hamilton's freshly pierced ears. Hamilton qualified on pole for the , continuing a 100% pole record at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. After setting his pole lap, Hamilton received instructions from his team to stop on circuit due to a lack of fuel in the car which would not be equivalent to the level necessary for a sample to be taken by the FIA. Hamilton was reprimanded after failing to complete his in-lap in a sufficient time, while his team received a $10,000 fine. This fine did not appear to affect Hamilton who won the race and promoted him to lead the Drivers Championship. A day after the Grand Prix Hamilton flew back into the UK and drove Ayrton Senna's championship winning MP4/4. Hamilton had been denied the chance to drive it in 2009 when the car had a gearbox problem the day before he drove it at the Goodwood Festival of Speed. Hamilton was clearly excited and overcome with emotion and described it as 'one of the best days of his life'. He also stated that he had 'ticked off one of his dreams' by driving the car.
Hamilton qualified third in Valencia and passed Mark Webber at the start of the race. He went up the inside of Vettel into the second corner but was run out of room by Vettel, jumped over the kerbs and made slight contact which resulted in some damage to his McLaren. When the safety car was deployed after Webber's 300 km/h flying crash, Vettel and Hamilton were on the pit straight. Vettel passed the second safety car line before the safety car exited the pits while Hamilton just missed making the line by about 0.5s. Hamilton passed the safety car after the second safety car line instead of decelerating to follow the safety car. Fernando Alonso was a second behind Hamilton and was disadvantaged by having to remain behind the safety car. Alonso complained on the radio to his team which led to the stewards investigating the incident and penalising Hamilton with a drive through penalty. The stewards announced the penalty 20 minutes after the incident which allowed Hamilton to make a gap before serving the penalty and kept him in second place. This angered Alonso and the Ferrari team as the penalty did not alter the results, leading Hamilton to accuse Alonso of "sour grapes", although the pair reconciled before the next race.
Hamilton finished second behind Vettel and retained his lead in the drivers championship. He finished second at Silverstone and fourth at Hockenheim, while in Hungary, Hamilton qualified fifth but retired during the race due to gearbox problems, losing the championship lead to Webber. Despite running into the gravel at Spa-Francorchamps, Hamilton won his third race of the season and reclaimed the championship lead.
Hamilton crashed out of the Singapore Grand Prix in a racing incident with Mark Webber on lap 35. Webber had overtaken Hamilton during his pitstop, then Hamilton attempted to overtake Webber whilst Webber was lapping Virgin Racing's Lucas di Grassi. The resulting collision ended Hamilton's race while Webber went on to finish third.
In Monaco, he qualified tenth after Q3 was red-flagged before he could set a competitive time due to a heavy crash from Sergio Pérez. He passed Schumacher at the start, but was then re-passed at the Grand Hotel hairpin. Later on he tried to pass Massa at this point, and hit Massa's side pod, stopping both temporarily. After this he passed and sent Massa into the barriers in the tunnel, putting him out of the race. He was then given a drive-through penalty. Later on, he was being lapped whilst battling with several other drivers. He braked to avoid Adrian Sutil, who had run wide, this caused Alguersuari to rear-end Hamilton, breaking his rear wing. This crash red-flagged the race as Petrov had hit the wall and injured himself. Hamilton's wing was repaired, and on the restart he sent Maldonado into the barriers, putting him out of the race too. He eventually finished 6th, one lap down. He was then given a 20 second time penalty for his crash with Maldonado, but did not drop him down the order. Hamilton later criticised the stewards after the race. At the , Hamilton attempted to pass teammate Button on the start/finish straight, though lack of visibility in wet conditions meant that Button was unaware of Hamilton's presence and they collided. Button carried on to victory and Hamilton retired with suspension damage.
Hamilton qualified third in Valencia, and dropped to fifth at the start, but he passed Massa during the pit stop phase to finish fourth. He qualified tenth at Silverstone, and moved up to sixth on the first lap. He later moved up to fourth place, but was told to conserve fuel towards the end of the race, and started being caught up by Massa. Massa passed him on the last lap, but Hamilton moved ahead at the final corner and marginally held on to fourth position. He qualified second at Germany, and took the lead from Webber at turn 1. Webber undercut Hamilton during the pit stops to take the lead, but Hamilton re-took the lead after the second set of pit stops, where Webber emerged just behind him and he passed Alonso round the outside of turn 2 to take his second victory of 2011. Another front-row start followed at Hungary and had many exciting battles for the lead with Button. He span whilst in the lead at one point and sent Paul di Resta onto the grass, for which he received a drive-through penalty, but recovered to finish fourth.
After qualifying second for the 2011 Belgian Grand Prix, Hamilton failed to finish for only the second time in the season after a collision with Sauber driver Kamui Kobayashi.
In his debut season, Hamilton took the record of Youngest World Drivers' Championship runner-up, at 22 years and 288 days, previously held by Kimi Räikkönen at 23 years and 360 days. In 2009, this record was taken by Sebastian Vettel, who was 22 years and 122 days when he secured runner-up position in the championship.
Hamilton is the first driver of black heritage to compete in Formula One (although Willy T. Ribbs tested an F1 car in 1986) and the first driver of black heritage to win a major race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in any discipline. In addition, he is the third youngest driver to achieve an F1 pole position, and the fourteenth F1 driver to achieve a podium finish on his debut.
During the 2007 European Grand Prix at the Nürburgring, Hamilton became the first driver to have his car recovered by a crane and put back on the track during an F1 race, although several drivers have been pushed back onto the circuit by the marshals without mechanical aids when judged to be in a dangerous position, such as Michael Schumacher during the 2003 European Grand Prix. Since then, the FIA have now banned the use of mechanical assistance to help move a car back onto the track, meaning that Hamilton became the first and the last driver to have his car recovered by crane back onto the track.
Lewis Hamilton's contract for the McLaren driver development program made him the youngest ever driver to secure a contract which later resulted in an F1 drive.
His aggressive style often attracts the attention of critics. For example, critics argued that Hamilton's defensive weaving during the 2010 Malaysian Grand Prix in attempt to break the tow of Vitaly Petrov's chasing Renault was potentially dangerous. Hamilton was quick to defend himself to these accusations, but race director Charlie Whiting clarified after the race that such weaving would favour a penalty in the future.
During the 2010 Monaco Grand Prix, Hamilton had an altered helmet design with the addition of a roulette wheel image on the top. Hamilton had said, "...I'll also be wearing a specially-painted helmet for the occasion. When you see it, you'll know why I'll be hoping for it to swing the odds in my favour."
! Season | ! Series | ! Team | ! Races | ! Wins | ! Poles | ! F/Laps | ! Podiums | ! Points | ! Position |
! 2001 | align=left | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ? | 5th | |
2002 | align=left | 13 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 7 | 274 | ||
align=left | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 92 | 5th | ||
2003 | align=left | 15 | 10 | 11 | 9 | 13 | 419 | ||
align=left | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | NC | ||
align=left | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 24 | 12th | ||
align=left | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 25 | 27th | ||
align=left | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | |||
2004 | align=left | 20 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 69 | 5th | |
align=left | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A | |||
1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 14th | |||
align=left | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 14th | ||
2005 | align=left | align=left rowspan=2 | 20 | 15 | 13 | 10 | 17 | 172 | |
align=left | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | N/A | |||
! 2006 | align=left | 21 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 14 | 114 | ||
! 2007 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 4 | 6 | 2 | 12 | 109 | |
! 2008 | align=left | align=left | 18 | 5 | 7 | 1 | 10 | 98 | |
! 2009 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 2 | 4 | 0 | 5 | 49 | 5th |
! 2010 | align=left | align=left | 19 | 3 | 1 | 5 | 9 | 240 | 4th |
! 2011 | align=left | align=left | 12 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 146* | 5th* |
! Year | ! Entrant | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! DC | ! Points |
! Manor Motorsport | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ! 5th | ! 92 |
! Year | ! Entrant | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! 10 | ! 11 | ! 12 | ! 13 | ! 14 | ! 15 | ! 16 | ! 17 | ! 18 | ! 19 | ! 20 | ! 21 | ! 22 | ! 23 | ! 24 | ! DC | ! Points |
!Manor Motorsport | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | NC | 0 |
! Year | ! Entrant | ! Chassis | ! Engine | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! 10 | ! 11 | ! 12 | ! 13 | ! 14 | ! 15 | ! 16 | ! 17 | ! 18 | ! 19 | ! 20 | ! DC | ! Points |
! Manor Motorsport | ! Dallara F302/049 | Mercedes-Benz in motorsport>HWA-Mercedes | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ! 5th | ! 68 | |
ART Grand Prix>ASM Formule 3 | ! Dallara F305/021 | Mercedes-Benz in motorsport>Mercedes | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#000000" style="color:white" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" |
! Year | ! Entrant | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! 10 | ! 11 | ! 12 | ! 13 | ! 14 | ! 15 | ! 16 | ! 17 | ! 18 | ! 19 | ! 20 | ! 21 | ! DC | ! Points |
! ART Grand Prix | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#000000" style="color:white" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#ffffbf" | bgcolor="#ffffbf" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#ffffbf" | bgcolor="#ffffbf" | bgcolor="#ffffbf" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" |
! Year | ! Entrant | ! Chassis | ! Engine | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! 10 | ! 11 | ! 12 | ! 13 | ! 14 | ! 15 | ! 16 | ! 17 | ! 18 | ! 19 | ! WDC | List of Formula One World Championship points scoring systems>Points |
Vodafone McLaren Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines>Mercedes | McLaren McLaren MP4-22>MP4-22 | ! | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ||||||
Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | |||||||
McLaren Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines>Mercedes | McLaren McLaren MP4-23>MP4-23 | ! | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | |||||
Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ||||||
McLaren Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines>Mercedes | McLaren McLaren MP4-24>MP4-24 | ! | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | ! 5th | ! 49 | ||||
Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines | bgcolor="#000000" style="color: #ffffff" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | ! 5th | ! 49 | |||||
McLaren Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines>Mercedes | McLaren McLaren MP4-25>MP4-25 | ! | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ! 4th | ! 240 | ||
Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ! 4th | ! 240 | |||
McLaren Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines>Mercedes | McLaren McLaren MP4-26>MP4-26 | ! Official Web Site
|
bgcolor=#DFDFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#FFFFBF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFDFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#FFFFBF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | ! 5th* | ! 146* |
Fernando Alonso24 years, 58 days(2005 season) | after = Sebastian Vettel23 years, 134 days(2010 season) | years = 23 years, 300 days(2008 season)}}
Danny Watts | title = AutosportBritish Club Driver of the Year | after = James Pickford | years = 2003}} Tiago Monteiro | title = AutosportRookie Of The Year | after = Sebastian Vettel| years =2006–2007}} Jenson Button | after= Jenson Button| years=2007–2008}} Jenson Button | title = AutosportBritish Competition Driver of the Year | after = Allan McNish| years = 2007}} Fernando Alonso | title = AutosportInternational Racing Driver Award | after = Jenson Button| years = 2007–2008}} Sebastian Vettel|title=Lorenzo Bandini Trophy|years=2010|after= Nico Rosberg}} Amélie Mauresmo | after = Rebecca Adlington | title = Laureus World Breakthrough of the Year | years = 2008}} }}
Category:1985 births Category:Living people Category:People from Stevenage Category:Black British sportspeople Category:English racecar drivers Category:English Formula One drivers Category:English people of Grenadian descent Category:McLaren Formula One drivers Category:Formula One World Drivers' Champions Category:GP2 Series drivers Category:GP2 Series Champions Category:Formula Three Euroseries drivers Category:Formula Three Euroseries Champions Category:British Formula Renault 2.0 drivers Category:Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 drivers Category:German Formula Renault 2.0 drivers Category:Monaco Grand Prix winners Category:CIK-FIA Karting World Championship drivers Category:English Roman Catholics Category:British karateka Category:BRDC Gold Star winners Category:Segrave Trophy recipients Category:Members of the Order of the British Empire Category:British expatriates in Switzerland
ar:لويس هاملتون ast:Lewis Hamilton bs:Lewis Hamilton bg:Луис Хамилтън ca:Lewis Hamilton cs:Lewis Hamilton cy:Lewis Hamilton da:Lewis Hamilton de:Lewis Hamilton et:Lewis Hamilton el:Λιούις Χάμιλτον es:Lewis Hamilton eo:Lewis Hamilton eu:Lewis Hamilton fa:لوئیز همیلتون fr:Lewis Hamilton gl:Lewis Hamilton ko:루이스 해밀턴 hi:लुईस हैमिल्टन hr:Lewis Hamilton id:Lewis Hamilton it:Lewis Hamilton he:לואיס המילטון jv:Lewis Hamilton lv:Luiss Hamiltons lb:Lewis Hamilton lt:Lewis Hamilton hu:Lewis Hamilton mr:लुइस हॅमिल्टन ms:Lewis Hamilton nl:Lewis Hamilton ja:ルイス・ハミルトン no:Lewis Hamilton nn:Lewis Hamilton pl:Lewis Hamilton pt:Lewis Hamilton ro:Lewis Hamilton ru:Хэмилтон, Льюис sq:Lewis Hamilton scn:Lewis Hamilton simple:Lewis Hamilton sk:Lewis Hamilton sl:Lewis Hamilton szl:Lewis Hamilton sr:Луис Хамилтон sh:Lewis Hamilton su:Lewis Hamilton fi:Lewis Hamilton sv:Lewis Hamilton te:లెవీస్ హామిల్టన్ th:ลูวิส แฮมิลตัน tr:Lewis Hamilton uk:Льюїс Гамільтон vi:Lewis Hamilton zh:劉易斯·咸美頓This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
stadium name | Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium |
---|---|
location | Al Ain, UAE |
opened | 1996 |
owner | Al-Ain S.C.C. |
surface | Grass |
tenants | UAE national football team 1996 AFC Asian Cup 2003 FIFA World Youth Championship |
seating capacity | 16,000 | title Capacity | publisher Worldstadia}} |
Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium () is a multi-purpose stadium in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates.
One of the most famous events to be staged on this stadium was the group E matches of the 2003 FIFA World Youth Championship and the stadium also hosted some matches from the 1996 AFC Asian Cup.
The stadium is used mostly for football matches and is one of the home grounds of Al-Ain SCC. The stadium was built to hold 12,000 people and as of the 2006/2007 season all the Al Ain team matches are played in this stadium.
The stadium's capacity was increased by another 4,000 so the new seating capacity is 16,000.
Category:Football venues in the United Arab Emirates Category:Multi-purpose stadiums Category:Sport in Abu Dhabi (emirate) Category:Al Ain FC Category:Buildings and structures in Al Ain Category:Visitor attractions in Al Ain
ar:ملعب الشيخ خليفة الدولي de:Scheich-Khalifa-International-Stadion fa:ورزشگاه بین المللی شیخ خلیفه fr:Stade international Sheikh Khalifa pl:Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium pt:Estádio Internacional Xeque Khalifa zh:谢赫哈里发国际体育场
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
! Year | ! Car | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! DC | ! Pts |
! Subaru Impreza WRX STi | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | ||||
! Subaru Impreza WRX STi | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | |||
! Subaru Impreza WRX STi | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#dfdfdf;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | style="background:#dfdfdf;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | |||
! Subaru Impreza WRX STi | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | |||
! Subaru Impreza WRX STi | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#dfdfdf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#ffdf9f;" | |||
! Ford Fiesta | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#ffffbf;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" |
! Year | ! Entrant | ! Car | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! 10 | ! 11 | ! 12 | ! 13 | ! 14 | ! 15 | ! 16 | ! WDC | ! Points |
rowspan=2 | ! Ken Block | Subaru Impreza WRX STI | style="background:#cfcfff;" | NC | 0 | |||||||||||||||
! Rally FaNZ | style="background:#cfcfff;" | |||||||||||||||||||
! Subaru Rally Team USA | ! Subaru Impreza WRX STI | style="background:#cfcfff;" | ! NC | ! 0 | ||||||||||||||||
! Monster World Rally Team | Ford Focus WRC>Ford Focus RS WRC 08 | style="background:#cfcfff;" | style="background:#cfcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#efcfff;" | style="background:#cfcfff;" | style="background:#dfffdf;" | style="background:#cfcfff;" | ! 19th | ! 2 | ||||||||||
! Monster World Rally Team | ! Ford Fiesta RS WRC | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | ! NC* | ! 0* |
In 2005, Ken Block along with his DC Shoes associates participated in the Gumball 3000 Rally. For the event they sent out three modified 2004 Subaru WRX STi's sponsored by DC Shoes.
In 2006, Ken Block competed in the One Lap of America competition along with Brian Scotto. They were teamed up in a 2006 Subaru WRX STi and finished forty-fifth overall.
In 2006, for the Discovery Channel show Stunt Junkies, Ken Block jumped his Subaru WRX STi rally car and a max height of .
Ken Block also holds the world record for the world's fastest snow cat, a modified Subaru STI called a Trax STI.
On September 14, 2010, Block's third Gymkhana video, featuring a Ford Fiesta, was released on YouTube. The video got more than seven million views in its first week.
On August 16, 2011, the fourth Gymkhana video, The Hollywood Megamercial was released on YouTube, featuring Block driving around the Universal Studios backlot.
Category:American rally drivers Category:World Rally Championship drivers Category:1967 births Category:Living people Category:American sports businesspeople
cs:Ken Block de:Ken Block et:Ken Block es:Ken Block fr:Ken Block it:Ken Block hu:Ken Block nl:Ken Block pt:Ken Block (piloto) ru:Блок, Кен fi:Ken Block sv:Ken BlockThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
name | Michael Schumacher |
---|---|
nationality | German |
birth date | January 03, 1969 |
2011 car number | 7 |
2011 team | Mercedes GP |
races | 281 (280 starts) |
championships | 7 (, , , , , , ) |
wins | 91 |
podiums | 154 |
poles | 68 |
fastest laps | 76 |
first race | 1991 Belgian Grand Prix |
first win | 1992 Belgian Grand Prix |
last win | 2006 Chinese Grand Prix |
last race | |
last season | 2010 |
last position | 9th (72 pts) |
points | 1,483 }} |
After beginning with karting, Schumacher won German drivers' championships in Formula König and Formula Three before joining Mercedes in the World Sportscar Championship. After one Mercedes-funded race for the Jordan Formula One team Schumacher signed as a driver for the Benetton Formula One team in 1991. After winning consecutive championships with Benetton in 1994/5, Schumacher moved to Ferrari in 1996 and won another five consecutive drivers' titles with them from 2000–2004. Schumacher retired from Formula One driving in 2006 staying with Ferrari as an advisor. Schumacher agreed to return for Ferrari part-way through 2009, as cover for the badly injured Felipe Massa, but was prevented by a neck injury. He later signed a 3-year contract to drive for the new Mercedes GP team starting in .
His career has not been without controversy, including being twice involved in collisions in the final race of a season that determined the outcome of the world championship, with Damon Hill in 1994 in Adelaide, and with Jacques Villeneuve in 1997 in Jerez.
Off the track Schumacher is an ambassador for UNESCO and a spokesman for driver safety. He has been involved in numerous humanitarian efforts throughout his life and donated tens of millions of dollars to charity. Michael and his younger brother Ralf Schumacher are the only brothers to win races in Formula One, and they were the first brothers to finish 1st and 2nd in the same race, in Montreal in 2001, and there again (in switched order) in 2003.
Regulations in Germany require a driver to be at least 14 years old to obtain a kart license. To get around this, Schumacher obtained a license in Luxembourg at the age of 12.
In 1983, he obtained his German license, a year after he won the German Junior Kart Championship. From 1984 on, Schumacher won many German and European kart championships. He joined Eurokart dealer Adolf Neubert in 1985 and by 1987 he was the German and European kart champion, then he quit school and began working as a mechanic. In 1988 he made his first step into single-seat car racing by participating in the German Formula Ford and Formula König series, winning the latter.
In 1989, Schumacher signed with Willi Weber's WTS Formula Three team. Funded by Weber, he competed in the German Formula 3 series, winning the title in 1990. At the end of 1990, along with his Formula 3 rivals Heinz-Harald Frentzen and Karl Wendlinger, he joined the Mercedes junior racing programme in the World Sports-Prototype Championship. This was unusual for a young driver: most of Schumacher's contemporaries would compete in Formula 3000 on the way to Formula One. However, Weber advised Schumacher that being exposed to professional press conferences and driving powerful cars in long distance races would help his career. In the 1990 World Sportscar Championship season, Schumacher won the season finale at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in a Sauber–Mercedes C11, and finished fifth in the drivers' championship despite only driving in 3 of the 9 races. He continued with the team in the 1991 World Sportscar Championship season, winning again at the final race of the season at Autopolis in Japan with a Sauber–Mercedes-Benz C291, leading to a ninth place finish in the drivers championship. He also competed at Le Mans during that season, finishing 5th in a car shared with Karl Wendlinger and Fritz Kreutzpointner. In 1991, he competed in one race in the Japanese Formula 3000 Championship, finishing second.
After his debut, and despite Jordan's signed agreement in principle with Schumacher's Mercedes management for the remainder of the season, Schumacher was signed by Benetton-Ford for the following race. Jordan applied for an injunction in the UK courts to prevent Schumacher driving for Benetton, but lost the case as they had not yet signed a contract. Schumacher finished the season with four points out of six races. His best finish was fifth in his second race, the , in which he finished ahead of his team-mate and three-time World Champion Nelson Piquet.
At the start of the season the Sauber team, planning their Formula One debut with Mercedes backing for the following year, invoked a clause in Schumacher's contract which stated that if Mercedes entered Formula One, Schumacher would drive for them. It was eventually agreed that Schumacher would stay with Benetton, Peter Sauber said that "[Schumacher] didn't want to drive for us. Why would I have forced him?". The year was dominated by the Williams of Nigel Mansell and Riccardo Patrese, featuring powerful Renault engines, semi-automatic gearboxes and active suspension to control the car's ride height. In the "conventional" Benetton B192 Schumacher took his place on the podium for the first time, finishing third in the . He went on to take his first victory at the , in a wet race at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit, which by 2003 he would call "far and away my favourite track". He finished third in the Drivers' Championship in 1992 with 53 points, three points behind runner-up Patrese.
The Williams of Damon Hill and Alain Prost also dominated the season. Benetton introduced their own active suspension and traction control early in the season, last of the frontrunning teams to do so. Schumacher won one race, the where he beat Prost, and had nine podium finishes, but retired in seven of the other 15 races. He finished the season in fourth, with 52 points.
The season was Schumacher's first Drivers' Championship. The season, however, was marred by the deaths of Ayrton Senna (witnessed by Schumacher, who was directly behind in 2nd position) and Roland Ratzenberger during the , and by allegations that several teams, including Schumacher's Benetton team, broke the sport's technical regulations.
Schumacher won six of the first seven races and was leading the , before a gearbox failure left him stuck in fifth gear. Schumacher finished the race in second place. Following the San Marino Grand Prix, the Benetton, Ferrari and McLaren teams were investigated on suspicion of breaking the FIA-imposed ban on electronic aids. Benetton and McLaren initially refused to hand over their source code for investigation. When they did so, the FIA discovered hidden functionality in both teams' software, but no evidence that it had been used in a race. Both teams were fined $100,000 for their initial refusal to cooperate. However, the McLaren software, which was a gearbox program that allowed automatic shifts, was deemed legal. By contrast, the Benetton software was deemed to be a form of "launch control" that would have allowed Schumacher to make perfect starts, which was explicitly outlawed by the regulations. At the , Schumacher was penalised for overtaking on the formation lap. He then ignored the penalty and the subsequent black flag, which indicates that the driver must immediately return to the pits, for which he was disqualified and later given a two-race ban. Benetton blamed the incident on a communication error between the stewards and the team. Schumacher was also disqualified after winning the after his car was found to have illegal wear on its skidblock, a measure used after the accidents at Imola to limit downforce and hence cornering speed. Benetton protested that the skidblock had been damaged when Schumacher spun over a kerb, but the FIA rejected their appeal because of the pattern of wear and damage visible on the block. These incidents helped Damon Hill close the points gap, and Schumacher led by a single point going into the final race in Australia. On lap 36 Schumacher hit the guardrail on the outside of the track while leading. Hill attempted to pass but as Schumacher's car returned to the track there was a collision on the corner causing them both to retire. As a result Schumacher won a very controversial championship, the first German to do so (Jochen Rindt raced under the Austrian flag).
In Schumacher successfully defended his title with Benetton. He now had the same Renault engine as Williams. He accumulated 33 more points than second-placed Damon Hill. With team-mate Johnny Herbert, he took Benetton to its first Constructors' Championship and became the youngest two-time world champion in Formula One history.
The season was marred by several collisions with Hill, in particular an overtaking manoeuvre by Hill took them both out of the on lap 45 and again on lap 23 of the Italian Grand Prix. Schumacher won nine of the 17 races, and finished on the podium 11 times. Only once did he qualify worse than fourth; at the , he qualified 16th, but went on to win the race. After Schumacher left Benetton at the end of the year, the team won only one more race before being bought by Renault in 2000.
Ferrari had previously come close to the championship in 1982 and 1990. The team had suffered a disastrous downturn in the early 1990s, partially as their famous V12 engine was no longer competitive against the smaller, lighter and more fuel efficient V10s of their competitors. Various drivers, notably Alain Prost, had given the vehicles labels such as "truck", "pig", and "accident waiting to happen". The poor performance of the Ferrari pit crews was considered a running joke. At the end of 1995, though the team had improved into a solid competitor, it was still considered inferior to front-running teams such as Benetton and Williams. Schumacher declared the Ferrari 412T good enough to win the Championship.
Schumacher, Ross Brawn, Rory Byrne, and Jean Todt (hired in 1993), have been credited as turning this once struggling team into the most successful team in Formula One history. Three-time World Champion Jackie Stewart believes the transformation of the Ferrari team was Schumacher's greatest feat. Eddie Irvine also joined the team, moving from Jordan.
Michael Schumacher and Jacques Villeneuve vied for the title in . Villeneuve, driving the superior Williams FW19, led the championship in the early part of the season. However, by mid-season, Schumacher had taken the Championship lead, winning five races, and entered the season's final Grand Prix with a one-point advantage. Towards the end of the race, held at Jerez, Schumacher's Ferrari developed a coolant leak and loss of performance indicating he may not finish the race. As Villeneuve approached to pass his rival, Schumacher attempted to provoke an accident but got the short end of the stick, retiring from the race. Villeneuve went on and scored four points to take the championship. Schumacher was punished for unsportsmanlike conduct for the collision and was disqualified from the Drivers' Championship.
In , Finnish driver Mika Häkkinen became Schumacher's main title competition. Häkkinen won the first two races of the season, gaining a 16 point advantage over Schumacher. Schumacher then won in Argentina and, with the Ferrari improving significantly in the second half of the season, Schumacher took six victories and had five other podium finishes. Ferrari took a 1–2 finish at the , the first Ferrari 1–2 finish since 1990, and the , which tied Schumacher with Häkkinen for the lead of the Drivers' Championship with 80 points, but Häkkinen won the Championship by winning the final two races. There were two controversies; at the Schumacher was leading on the last lap when he turned into the pit lane, crossed the start finish line and stopped for a ten second stop go penalty. There was some doubt whether this counted as serving the penalty, but, because he had crossed the finish line when he came into the pit lane, the win was valid. At Spa, Schumacher was leading the race by 40 seconds in heavy spray, but collided with David Coulthard's McLaren when the Scot, a lap down, slowed in very poor visibility to let Schumacher past. After both cars returned to the pits, Schumacher leaped out of his car and headed to McLaren's garage in an infuriated manner and accused Coulthard of trying to kill him.
Rumours circulated that Coulthard may be replaced by Schumacher for the 1999 season and beyond and, in a previous edition of the F1 Racing magazine, Ron Dennis revealed that he had approached Schumacher to sign a deal with McLaren. However, peripheral financial issues that tied Schumacher with Ferrari, such as sponsorship agreements and payment, could not be rectified in a move to the rival team and so, no deal came to fruition.
Schumacher's efforts helped Ferrari win the Constructors title in . He lost his chance to win the Drivers' Championship at the at the high-speed Stowe Corner, his car's rear brake failed, sending him off the track and resulting in a broken leg. During his 98 day absence, he was replaced by Finnish driver Mika Salo. After missing six races, he made his return at the inaugural , qualifying in the pole position by almost a second. He then assumed the role of second driver, assisting team mate Eddie Irvine's bid to win the Drivers' Championship for Ferrari. In the last race of the season, the , Häkkinen won his second consecutive title. Schumacher would later say that Häkkinen was the opponent he respected the most.
During this period Schumacher won more races and championships than any other driver in the history of the sport. Schumacher won his third World Championship in after a year-long battle with Häkkinen. Schumacher won the first three races of the season and five of the first eight. Mid-way through the year, Schumacher's chances suffered with three consecutive non-finishes, allowing Häkkinen to close the gap in the standings. Häkkinen then took another two victories, before Schumacher won at the . At the post race press conference, after equalling the number of wins (41) won by his idol, Ayrton Senna, Schumacher broke into tears. The championship fight would come down to the penultimate race of the season, the . Starting from pole position, Schumacher lost the lead to Häkkinen at the start. After his second pit-stop, however, Schumacher came out ahead of Häkkinen and went on to win the race and the championship.
In , Schumacher took his fourth drivers' title. Four other drivers won races, but none sustained a season-long challenge for the championship. Schumacher scored a record-tying nine wins and clinched the world championship with four races yet to run. He finished the championship with 123 points, 58 ahead of runner-up Coulthard. Season highlights included the , where Schumacher finished 2nd to his brother Ralf, thus scoring the first ever 1–2 finish by brothers in Formula One; and the Belgian Grand Prix in which Schumacher scored his 52nd career win, breaking Alain Prost's record for most career wins.
In , Schumacher used the Ferrari F2002 to retain his Drivers' Championship. There was again some controversy, however, at the , where his teammate, Rubens Barrichello was leading but in the final metres of the race, under orders, slowed to allow Schumacher to win the race. The crowd broke into outraged boos at the result and Schumacher tried to make amends by placing Barrichello at the top step of the podium. At the later that year, Schumacher dominated the race and was set for a close finish with Barrichello. At the end he slowed down to create a formation finish with Barrichello, but slowed too much allowing Barrichello to take the victory. In winning the Drivers' Championship he equalled the record set by Juan Manuel Fangio of five world championships. Ferrari won 15 out of 17 races, and Schumacher won the title with six races remaining in the season. Schumacher broke his own record, shared with Nigel Mansell, of nine race wins in a season, by winning eleven times and finishing every race on the podium. He finished with 144 points, a record-breaking 67 points ahead of the runner-up, his teammate Rubens Barrichello. This pair finished 9 of the 17 races in the first two places.
Schumacher broke Juan Manuel Fangio's record of five World Drivers' Championships by winning the drivers' title for the sixth time in , a closely contested season. The biggest competition came once again from the McLaren Mercedes and Williams BMW teams. In the first race, Schumacher ran off track, and in the following two, was involved in collisions. He fell 16 points behind Kimi Räikkönen. Schumacher won the and the next two races, and closed within two points of Räikkönen. Aside from Schumacher's victory in Canada, and Barrichello's victory in Britain, the mid-season was dominated by Williams drivers Ralf Schumacher and Juan Pablo Montoya, who each claimed two victories. After the , Michael Schumacher led Montoya and Kimi Räikkönen by only one and two points, respectively. Ahead of the next race, the FIA announced changes to the way tyre widths were to be measured: this forced Michelin, supplier to Williams and McLaren among others, to rapidly redesign their tyres before the . Schumacher, running on Bridgestone tyres, won the next two races. After Montoya was penalised in the , only Schumacher and Räikkönen remained in contention for the title. At the final round, the , Schumacher needed only one point whilst Räikkönen needed to win. By finishing the race in eighth place, Schumacher took one point and assured his sixth World Drivers' title, ending the season two points ahead of Räikkönen.
In , Schumacher won a record twelve of the first thirteen races of the season, only failing to finish in Monaco after an accident with Juan Pablo Montoya during a safety car period when he briefly locked his car's brakes. He clinched a record seventh drivers' title at the . He finished that season with a record 148 points, 34 points ahead of the runner-up, teammate Rubens Barrichello, and set a new record of 13 race wins out of a possible 18, surpassing his previous best of 11 wins from the season.
became the last season of Schumacher's Ferrari career. After three races, Schumacher had just 11 points and was already 17 points behind Alonso. He won the following two races. His pole position at San Marino was his 66th, breaking Ayrton Senna's 12 year old record.
Schumacher was stripped of pole position at the and started the race at the back of the grid. This was due to him stopping his car and blocking part of the circuit while Alonso was on his qualifying lap; he still managed to work his way up to 5th place on the notoriously cramped Monaco circuit. By the , the ninth race of the season, Schumacher was 25 points behind Alonso, but he then won the following three races to reduce his disadvantage to 11. His win at Hockenheim was the last home win for a German as of now. After his victories in Italy (in which Alonso had an engine failure) and China, in which Alonso had tyre problems, Schumacher led in the championship standings for the first time during the season. Although he and Alonso had the same point total, Schumacher was in front because he had won more races. The Japanese Grand Prix was led by Schumacher with only 16 laps to go, when, for the first time since the 2000 French Grand Prix, Schumacher's car suffered engine failure. Alonso won the race, which gave him a ten point championship lead. With only one race left in the season, Schumacher could only win the championship if he won the season finale and Alonso scored no points.
Before the , Schumacher conceded the title to Alonso. In pre-race ceremonies, football legend Pelé presented a trophy to Schumacher for his years of dedication to Formula One. During the race's qualifying session, Schumacher had the best time of all drivers through the first two sessions; but a fuel pressure problem prevented him from completing a single lap during the third session, forcing him to start the race in tenth position. Early in the race Schumacher moved up to sixth place. However, in overtaking Alonso's teammate, Giancarlo Fisichella, Schumacher experienced a tyre puncture caused by the front wing of Fisichella's car. Schumacher pitted and consequently fell to 19th place, 70 seconds behind teammate and race leader Felipe Massa. Schumacher recovered and overtook both Fisichella and Räikkönen to secure fourth place. His performance was classified in the press as "heroic", an "utterly breath-taking drive", and a "performance that ... sums up his career".
On 13 November 2007 Schumacher, who had not driven a Formula One car since he had retired a year earlier, undertook a formal test session for the first time aboard the F2007. He returned in December 2007 to continue helping Ferrari with their development program at Jerez circuit. He focused on testing electronics and tyres for the 2008 Formula One season.
During 2008 Schumacher also competed in motorcycle racing in the IDM Superbike-series, but stated that he had no intention of a second competitive career in this sport. He was quoted as saying that riding a Ducati was the most exhilarating thing he had done in his life, the second most being sky diving.
Ross Brawn had contacted Schumacher over a potential return to F1 with Mercedes involvement in November 2009, seeking a substitute for the possibly outgoing driver Jenson Button. On 2 November Rubens Barrichello had left Brawn GP followed by Button on 18 November with Rosberg announced by Mercedes as the first replacement driver on 23 November. The possible return of Schumacher began being reported in the German press on 13 December and, ten days later, Mercedes confirmed Schumacher's return completing their line-up. Schumacher signed a three year contract, reportedly worth £20m, with Mercedes who were thought to want 22-year-old German driver Sebastian Vettel as a long term replacement afterwards. In March 2010, The Daily Mail reported that Schumacher's deal was closer to £21m (€24m, $32m) a year.
Schumacher's surprise re-entry to the sport was compared to Niki Lauda's return in 1982 aged 33 and Nigel Mansell's return in 1994 at age 41. Schumacher turned 41 on 3 January 2010 and his prospects with Mercedes were compared with the record set by the oldest F1 champion Juan Manuel Fangio who was 46 when he won his fifth championship.
Schumacher's first drive of the 2010 Mercedes car – the Mercedes MGP W01 – was at the official test on 2 February 2010 in Valencia. He finished sixth in the first race of the season at the . A fortnight later at the Schumacher, after running as high as third on the opening lap, was caught up in a tangle between Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button at the start and had to pit for a new front wing. He came from the back to finish in the points in tenth position after spending 20 laps behind Toro Rosso's Jaime Alguersuari. In the Schumacher retired early in the race with a faulty wheel nut. Schumacher qualified 9th in the and finished 10th after being passed by several other drivers in the wet conditions towards the end of the race. After the race former driver Stirling Moss suggested that Schumacher, who had finished behind his team-mate in each of the first four qualifying sessions and races, might be "past it." Many other respected former Formula One drivers thought otherwise, including former rival Damon Hill, who warned "you should never write Schumacher off." GrandPrix.com identified the inherent understeer of the Mercedes car, exacerbated by the narrower front tyres introduced for the 2010 season, as contributing to Schumacher's difficulties. Jenson Button shed some more light on Schumacher's car trouble when he confessed that the Mercedes 2010 car was designed for him, and that his driving style is poles apart from Schumacher.
For the first European race of the season, the , Mercedes upgraded their car with revised aerodynamics and a longer wheelbase. Schumacher was ahead of Rosberg in qualifying and the race finishing fourth after defending his position from reigning world champion Jenson Button after the pit stops. At the Schumacher qualified seventh and finished sixth after passing Ferrari's Fernando Alonso on the final corner of the race when the safety car returned to the pits. However he was penalised 20 seconds after the race by the race stewards dropping him to 12th and thus out of the points. The stewards, advised by former world champion Damon Hill, judged the pass to be in breach of rule 40.13 of the sporting code stating that "If the race ends whilst the safety car is deployed it will enter the pit lane at the end of the last lap and the cars will take the chequered flag as normal without overtaking." Mercedes GP had interpreted "the race control messages 'Safety Car in this lap' and 'Track Clear' and the green flags and lights shown by the marshals after safety car line one" to mean that the race would not finish under the safety car. The FIA subsequently outlined plans to clarify the regulations and Mercedes GP dropped their plans to appeal.
In Turkey, Schumacher had his best qualifying session since his return qualifying fifth ahead of team mate Rosberg in sixth. In the race Schumacher finished fourth which was his best race finish since his return. However 2 races later at the in Valencia, Schumacher finished a lowly 15th – his lowest recorded finish in his career – after being caught up in a controversial safety-car ruling, which also ruined the race of Fernando Alonso. Schumacher was near the front of the field until he was stuck at the end of the pit lane, following the safety car, while the majority of the field passed him. In Hungary, Schumacher finished outside the points in eleventh, but was found guilty of dangerous driving at while unsuccessfully defending tenth position against Rubens Barrichello. As a result he was demoted ten places on the grid for the following race, the Belgian Grand Prix, where he finished seventh, despite starting 21st after his grid penalty.
In the , Schumacher missed out on the top ten in qualifying but managed to finish ninth. A fortnight later at the , Schumacher finished 13th after the Sauber of Nick Heidfeld collided with him on Lap 36, knocking Heidfeld out of the race. At the , Schumacher finished sixth before a fourth and seventh in the next two races in Korea and Brazil. At the season finale in Abu Dhabi, Schumacher was involved in a major accident on the first lap, which occurred after Schumacher was spun around by his teammate Nico Rosberg. As Schumacher was trying to maneuver his car back around, Vitantonio Liuzzi's Force India ploughed into his Mercedes head-on, barely missing his head. Nobody was hurt in the crash, but Schumacher said the crash had been "frightening."
It was the first season since his début season in 1991 that Schumacher finished without a win, pole position, podium or fastest lap.
At the 2011 Wroom meeting in Madonna di Campiglio, Italy, Fernando Alonso, the second most successful Formula One driver still racing, said of Schumacher: "He will be always super class; if the car is right, he will be a contender that we will fear most."
After an unsuccessful , where he retired due to puncture damage, Schumacher had an average race in Malaysia, finishing in ninth place to score his team's only points, generally battling it out with the midfield of the pack. A problem with his DRS system resulted in Schumacher qualifying only 14th in China, but he worked his way up to 8th place during the race. He added more points with sixth place in Spain, and at the , Schumacher had arguably his best performance since returning from retirement. He finished in fourth position, but ran as high as second in a race which was almost entirely contested in wet conditions. Schumacher was passed late in the race by both Jenson Button, who went on to win the race, and Mark Webber, by the use of the DRS.
In Valencia, he ploughed into the side of Vitaly Petrov's Renault while exiting the pit lane, breaking his own front wing, meaning he had to pit again the following lap. This incident left him outside of the points, and eventually finished 17th. There was more of the same in Britain when Schumacher locked his front tyres while running behind Kamui Kobayashi, attempted to take avoiding action, and again broke his front wing spinning Kobayashi 180 degrees. As well as pitting to replace the wing, Schumacher served a 10 second stop-go penalty for the incident. Although working his way up to 9th, Schumacher was unhappy with the result and described the Kobayashi incident as his misjudgement.
In an interview with Italian newspaper Corriere dello Sport – Stadio during the mid-season break, Schumacher admitted that he needed to re-evaluate his position in Formula One.
Schumacher, in conjunction with Schuberth, helped develop the first lightweight carbon helmet. In 2004, a prototype was publicly tested by being driven over by a tank; it survived intact. The helmet keeps the driver cool by funneling directed airflow through fifty holes.
Schumacher's original helmet sported the colours of the German flag and his sponsor's decals. On the top was a blue circle with white astroids. When Jos Verstappen was his team-mate, Schumacher added 4 red diagonal strokes over the visor to differentiate his helmet from his team-mate. After Schumacher joined Ferrari a prancing horse was added on the back. From the 2000 Monaco Grand Prix, in order to differentiate his colours from new teammate Rubens Barrichello, Schumacher changed the upper blue colour and some of the white areas to red.
He sported one-off helmet designs three times. For the 1998 Japanese Grand Prix, a title decider with Mika Häkkinen, he replaced the German flag with a chequered flag motif and reflective silver replacing the white areas. At the 2004 Italian Grand Prix the German flag design was replaced with an Italian flag in honour of his team's home race. For Brazilian Grand Prix race of 2006 (at the time intended to be his final Grand Prix), he wore an all-red helmet that included the names of his ninety-one Grand Prix victories. For the 2011 Belgian Grand Prix, Schumacher's 20th anniversary in Formula One, he wore a special gold plated helmet. The helmet, very similar to his current helmet, included the year of his début to the present, and the years of his seven world titles.
In honour of Schumacher's racing career and his efforts to improve safety and the sport, he was awarded an FIA Gold Medal for Motor Sport in 2006. In 2007, in recognition of his contribution to Formula One racing, the Nürburgring racing track renamed turns 8 and 9 (the Audi and Shell Kurves) as the Schumacher S, and a month later he presented A1 Team Germany with the A1 World Cup at the A1GP World Cup of Motorsport 2007 awards ceremony. He was nominated for the Prince of Asturias Award for Sport for 2007, which he won both for sporting prowess and for his humanitarian record.
In 2008 the Swiss Football Association appointed Schumacher as the Swiss ambassador for the 2008 European football championship.
On 30 April 2010, Schumacher was honored with the Officier of Légion d'honneur title from French prime minister François Fillon.
At the 1997 European Grand Prix at Jerez, the last race of the season, Schumacher led Williams' Jacques Villeneuve by one point in the Drivers' Championship. As Villeneuve attempted to pass Schumacher at the Dry Sack Corner on lap 48, Schumacher turned in and the right-front wheel of Schumacher's Ferrari hit the left side pod of Villeneuve's car. Schumacher retired from the race as a result but Villeneuve finished in third place, taking four points and so becoming the World Champion. The race stewards did not award any penalty, but two weeks after the race Schumacher was disqualified from the entire 1997 season after a FIA disciplinary hearing found that his "manoeuvre was an instinctive reaction and although deliberate not made with malice or premeditation. It was a serious error." Schumacher accepted the decision and admitted having made a mistake. Schumacher's actions were widely condemned in British, German, and Italian newspapers. This made Schumacher the only driver in the history of the sport, , to be disqualified from a Driver's World Championship, although the McLaren team was disqualified from the 2007 Constructor’s Championship and fined $100m for illegal possession of Ferrari technical information.
The 1998 Canadian Grand Prix saw Schumacher accused of dangerous driving when his exit from the pit-lane forced Heinz-Harald Frentzen off the track and into retirement. Despite receiving a 10 second penalty, Schumacher recovered and won the race. In the press conference, he publicly accused Damon Hill of weaving dangerously as they fought for position, stating "If you want to kill me, find some other way", a statement widely condemned as either hypocritical, or a cynical ploy to divert attention from his actions with Frentzen.
Two laps from the finish of the 1998 British Grand Prix, Michael Schumacher was leading the race when he was issued a stop-and-go penalty for overtaking a lapped car (Alexander Wurz) during the early moments of a Safety Car period. This penalty involves going into the pit lane and stopping for 10 seconds, and the rules state that a driver must serve his penalty within three laps of the penalty being issued. On the third lap after receiving the penalty, Schumacher turned into the pit lane to serve his penalty, but as this was the last lap of the race, and as Ferrari's pit box was located after the start/finish line, Schumacher technically finished the race before serving the penalty. The stewards initially resolved that problem by adding 10 seconds to Schumacher's race time, then later rescinded the penalty completely due to the irregularities in how the penalty had been issued.
In the Belgian Grand Prix, Schumacher was involved in a race-ending collision whilst trying to lap David Coulthard in heavy spray. After the race he stormed into the McLaren garage and accused Coulthard of trying to kill him, and McLaren and Ferrari team members had to separate the drivers. Coulthard admitted some 5 years later that the accident had been his fault.
During qualifying for the 2006 Monaco Grand Prix Schumacher set the fastest time, but stopped his car in the Rascasse corner on the racing line, leaving the corner partially blocked, while his main contender for the season title, Fernando Alonso, was on his final qualifying lap. Schumacher stated that he simply locked up the wheels going into the corner and that the car then stalled while he attempted to reverse out. Alonso believed he would have been on pole if the incident had not happened, and Schumacher was stripped of pole position by the race stewards and started the race at the back of the grid. In the same qualifying session, Giancarlo Fisichella was similarly found to have blocked David Coulthard from improving his time, but Fisichella was only demoted five places on the grid.
At the 2010 Monaco Grand Prix, the safety car was deployed after an accident, involving Karun Chandhok and Jarno Trulli, and pulled into the pits on the last lap. Schumacher passed Alonso before the finish line. Mercedes held that “the combination of the race control messages ‘Safety Car in this lap’ and ‘Track Clear’ and the green flags and lights shown by the marshals after safety car line one indicated that the race was not finishing under the safety car and all drivers were free to race. This opinion appears to have been shared by the majority of the teams with cars in the top ten positions who also gave their drivers instructions to race to the finish line.” However an FIA investigation found Schumacher guilty of breaching Safety Car regulations and awarded him a 20-seconds penalty, which cost him 6 places.
One of his main hobbies is horse riding, and he plays football for his local team FC Echichens. He has appeared in several football charity games and organised games between Formula One drivers.
On 23 June 2003, Schumacher was appointed as an Ambassador at Large for the Most Serene Republic of San Marino.
In 2004, Forbes magazine listed him as the 2nd highest paid athlete in the world. In 2005 Eurobusiness magazine identified Schumacher as the world's first billionaire athlete. His 2004 salary was reported to be around US $80 million. Forbes magazine ranked him 17th in their "The World's Most Powerful Celebrities" list. A significant share of his income came from advertising. For example, Deutsche Vermögensberatung paid him $8 million over three years from 1999 for wearing a 10 by 8 centimetre advertisement on his post-race cap. The deal was extended until 2010. He donated $10 million for aid after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake. His donation surpassed that of any other sports person, most sports leagues, many worldwide corporations and even some countries. Schumacher's bodyguard Burkhard Cramer was killed in the tsunami along with his two sons.
Schumacher is a special ambassador to UNESCO and has donated 1.5 million Euros to the organization. Additionally, he paid for the construction of a school for poor children and for area improvements in Dakar, Senegal. He supports a hospital for child victims of war in Sarajevo, which specialises in caring for amputees. In Lima, Peru he funded the "Palace for the Poor", a centre for helping homeless street children obtain an education, clothing, food, medical attention, and shelter. He stated his interest in these various efforts was piqued both by his love for children and the fact that these causes had received little attention. While an exact figure for the amount of money he has donated throughout his life is unknown, it is known that in his last four years as a driver, he donated at least $50 million. In 2008 it was revealed that he had donated between $5M and $10M to the William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Park of Bill Clinton.
Since his participation in an FIA European road safety campaign, as part of his punishment after the collision at the 1997 European Grand Prix, Schumacher has continued to support other campaigns, such as Make Roads Safe, which is led by the FIA Foundation and calls on G8 countries and the UN to recognise global road deaths as a major global health issue. In 2008, Schumacher was the figurehead of an advertising campaign by Bacardi to raise awareness about responsible drinking, with a focus on communicating an international message 'drinking and driving don't mix'. He featured in an advertising campaign for television, cinema and online media, supported by consumer engagements, public relations and digital media across the world.
On the eve of the 2002 British Grand Prix, on behalf of Fiat, Schumacher presented a Ferrari 360 Modena to legendary Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar at Silverstone.
On 21 June 2009, Schumacher appeared on the BBC's motoring programme Top Gear as The Stig. Presenter Jeremy Clarkson hinted later in the programme that Schumacher was not the regular Stig. The BBC has since confirmed that this is the case; Schumacher was there on that occasion because Ferrari would not allow anyone else to drive the one-of-a-kind black Ferrari FXX which was featured in the show. The FXX was presented to Schumacher upon his retirement at Monza in 2006.
When Schumacher appeared on Top Gear in 2009, he told Jeremy Clarkson during his interview that the road cars that he drives are a Fiat 500 Abarth, and a Fiat Croma which is his family car.
! Season | ! Series | ! Team | ! Races | ! Wins | ! Poles | ! F/Laps | ! Podiums | ! Points | ! Position |
1988 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 50 | |||
7 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 124 | 6th | |||
10 | 9 | 1 | 1 | 10 | 192 | ||||
1989 | align=left | 12 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 7 | 163 | ||
align=left | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | |||
1990 | align=left | align=left | 3 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 21 | =5th |
align=left | 11 | 5 | 6 | 4 | 7 | 148 | |||
align=left | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | ||||
1991 | rowspan=2 align=left | align=left| Team 7UP Jordan | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
align=left| Camel Benetton Ford | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | |||
align=left | align=left | 8 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 43 | 9th | |
align=left | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | NC | ||
align=left | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 12th | ||
! 1992 | align=left | align=left| Camel Benetton Ford | 16 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 8 | 53 | |
! 1993 | align=left | align=left| Camel Benetton Ford | 16 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 9 | 52 | 4th |
! 1994 | align=left | align=left | 14 | 8 | 6 | 8 | 10 | 92 | |
! 1995 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 9 | 4 | 8 | 11 | 102 | |
! 1996 | align=left | align=left | 16 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 8 | 59 | |
! 1997 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 8 | 78 | |
! 1998 | align=left | align=left | 16 | 6 | 3 | 6 | 11 | 86 | |
! 1999 | align=left | align=left | 10 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 6 | 44 | 5th |
! 2000 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 9 | 9 | 2 | 12 | 108 | |
! 2001 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 9 | 11 | 3 | 14 | 123 | |
! 2002 | align=left | align=left | 17 | 11 | 7 | 7 | 17 | 144 | |
! 2003 | align=left | align=left | 16 | 6 | 5 | 5 | 9 | 93 | |
! 2004 | align=left | align=left | 18 | 13 | 8 | 10 | 15 | 148 | |
! 2005 | align=left | align=left | 19 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | 62 | |
! 2006 | align=left | align=left | 18 | 7 | 4 | 7 | 12 | 121 | |
! 2007 | align=left | align=left | |||||||
! 2008 | align=left | align=left | |||||||
! 2009 | align=left | align=left | |||||||
! 2010 | align=left | 19 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 72 | 9th | |
! 2011 | align=left | 12 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 42* | 8th* |
Year | ! Chassis | ! Engine | ! 1 | ! 2 | ! 3 | ! 4 | ! 5 | ! 6 | ! 7 | ! 8 | ! 9 | ! 10 | ! 11 | ! 12 | ! 13 | ! 14 | ! 15 | ! 16 | ! 17 | ! 18 | ! 19 | ! WDC | List of Formula One World Championship points scoring systems>Points | ||||||||||||||||
rowspan="2"> | Jordan Grand Prix>Team | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | 14th | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Camel (cigarette) | ! [[Benetton Formula | ! [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
[[Camel (cigarette) | ! [[Benetton Formula | [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Benetton Formula | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
[[Camel (cigarette) | ! [[Benetton Formula | [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | 4th | 52 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Benetton Formula | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 Up | ! [[Jordan Grand Prix | ! [[Ford Motor Company | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | style="color: white;" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | 14th | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Camel (cigarette) | ! [[Benetton Formula | ! [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
[[Camel (cigarette) | ! [[Benetton Formula | [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Benetton Formula | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
[[Camel (cigarette) | ! [[Benetton Formula | [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | 4th | 52 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Benetton Formula | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benetton Formula>Benetton Ford | ! | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#000000" style="color: #ffffff" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#000000" style="color: #ffffff" | ITA">Benetton Formula | ! [[Ford Motor Company | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#000000" style="color: #ffffff" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#000000" style="color: #ffffff" | ITA | 1994 Portuguese Grand Prix>POR | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | EUR1 | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||
Mild Seven Benetton Formula | Benetton Renault | ! | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari S.p.A.">Benetton Formula | ! [[Renault F1 | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari S.p.A. | ! | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | AUT">Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | AUT | 1999 German Grand Prix>GER | HUN | 1999 Belgian Grand Prix>BEL | ITA | 1999 European Grand Prix>EUR | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | ! 5th | ! 44 | |||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||
! rowspan="2" | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||
! rowspan="2" | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
! rowspan="2" | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||
! rowspan="2" | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
! rowspan="2" | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||
! rowspan="2" | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#CFCFFF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
Marlboro (cigarette)>Marlboro | ! | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | |||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Mercedes GP">Scuderia Ferrari | ! [[Scuderia Ferrari | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#DFDFDF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#FFFFBF" | bgcolor="#EFCFFF" | bgcolor="#DFFFDF" | ||||||||||||||||||||
! [[Mercedes GP Petronas F1 Team | ! Mercedes GP | ! [[Mercedes-Benz High Performance Engines | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | ! 9th | ! 72 | ||||||||||||||||
! [[Mercedes GP Petronas F1 Team | ! [[Mercedes GP | ! [[Mercedes-Benz High Performance Engines | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#CFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | bgcolor=#EFCFFF | bgcolor=#DFFFDF | ! 8th* | ! 42* |
! Record | ! Number |
List of Formula One driver records#Total championships>Championship titles | 7 (, , , , , , ) |
! Consecutive titles | 5 (–) |
List of Grand Prix winners>Race victories | 91 |
List of Formula One driver records#Most consecutive wins>Consecutive wins | 7 (, 2004 European Grand Prix |
! Wins with one team | |
! Wins at same GP | |
! Wins at different GPs | 22 |
Longest Time between first and last wins | 14 years, 32 days |
! Second places | 43 |
List of Formula One driver records#Total podium finishes>Podiums (Top 3) | 154 |
List of Formula One driver records#Most consecutive podium positions>Consecutive podium finishes | 19 (2001 United States Grand Prix |
! Most consecutive top two finishes | 15 ([[2002 Brazilian Grand Prix |
Points finishes | 209 |
! Consecutive points finishes | 24 (2001 Hungarian Grand Prix |
! Laps leading | 4741 (22,155 km) |
Pole positions | 68 |
List of Formula One driver records#Total Starts from First Row>Front row starts | 115 |
List of Formula One driver records#Total fastest laps>Fastest laps | 76 |
List of Formula One driver records#Double (pole & win in same race)>Doubles (Pole and win) | 40 |
List of Formula One driver records#Hat Trick (pole, win & fastest lap in same race)>Perfect Score (Pole, fastest lap and win) | 22 |
List of Formula One driver records#Career points>Championship points | 1,483 |
! Most wins in a season for a runner-up | 7 () |
Autodromo Nazionale Monza>Monza (Formula One) | 5 |
List of Formula One driver records#Most wins in a season>Wins in a season | 13 (72%) () |
List of Formula One driver records#Most fastest laps in a season>Fastest laps in a season | 10 () |
List of Formula One driver records#Most podium positions in a season>Podium finishes in a season | 17 (100%) () |
! Championship won with most races left | 6 () |
! Largest championship-winning margin | 67 () |
! Consecutive years with a win | 15 (–) |
! Most races with 1 team | 181 (Ferrari) |
Record shared with Alain Prost ( and ) and Kimi Räikkönen ().
Record shared with Kimi Räikkönen ( and ).
Schumacher had a voice in the Disney/Pixar movie Cars. His character is himself as a car (Ferrari F430). He also appeared as himself in a French movie Asterix and Obelix at the Olympic Games.
All race and championship results (1991–2006) are taken from the Official Formula 1 Website. 1991 Season review onwards. www.formula1.com. Retrieved 23 May 2007
Category:1969 births Category:Living people Category:People from Hürth Category:24 Hours of Le Mans drivers Category:Ambassadors of San Marino Category:CIK-FIA Karting World Championship drivers Category:Benetton Formula One drivers Category:Ferrari Formula One drivers Category:Formula One World Drivers' Champions Category:Formula Ford drivers Category:German expatriates in Monaco Category:German expatriates in Switzerland Category:German Formula One drivers Category:German Formula Three Championship drivers Category:German racecar drivers Category:Japanese Formula 3000 Championship drivers Category:Laureus World Sports Awards winners Category:Monaco Grand Prix winners Category:German Roman Catholics
ace:Michael Schumacher af:Michael Schumacher ar:مايكل شوماخر ast:Michael Schumacher az:Mihael Şumaxer bn:মিশাএল শুমাখার map-bms:Michael Schumacher be:Міхаэль Шумахер be-x-old:Міхаэль Шумахер bi:Michael Schumacher bar:Michael Schumacher bs:Michael Schumacher bg:Михаел Шумахер ca:Michael Schumacher ceb:Michael Schumacher cs:Michael Schumacher cy:Michael Schumacher da:Michael Schumacher de:Michael Schumacher dv:މައިކަލް ޝޫމާކަރ et:Michael Schumacher el:Μίχαελ Σουμάχερ es:Michael Schumacher eo:Michael Schumacher eu:Michael Schumacher fa:میشائل شوماخر fr:Michael Schumacher fy:Michael Schumacher ga:Michael Schumacher gl:Michael Schumacher ko:미하엘 슈마허 hr:Michael Schumacher io:Michael Schumacher id:Michael Schumacher ie:Michael Schumacher zu:Michael Schumacher is:Michael Schumacher it:Michael Schumacher he:מיכאל שומאכר jv:Michael Schumacher kn:ಮೈಕೆಲ್ ಶೂಮಾಕರ್ ka:მიხაელ შუმახერი ht:Michael Schumacher la:Michael Schumacher lv:Mihaels Šūmahers lt:Michael Schumacher hu:Michael Schumacher ml:മൈക്കൾ ഷൂമാക്കർ mr:मिखाएल शुमाखर ms:Michael Schumacher nah:Michael Schumacher nl:Michael Schumacher ja:ミハエル・シューマッハ no:Michael Schumacher nn:Michael Schumacher pl:Michael Schumacher pt:Michael Schumacher ro:Michael Schumacher qu:Michael Schumacher ru:Шумахер, Михаэль sco:Michael Schumacher sq:Michael Schumacher scn:Michael Schumacher simple:Michael Schumacher sk:Michael Schumacher sl:Michael Schumacher sr:Михаел Шумахер sh:Michael Schumacher su:Michael Schumacher fi:Michael Schumacher sv:Michael Schumacher tl:Michael Schumacher ta:மைக்கேல் சூமாக்கர் th:มิคาเอล ชูมัคเกอร์ tg:Михаэл Шумахер tr:Michael Schumacher uk:Міхаель Шумахер vec:Michael Schumacher vi:Michael Schumacher wa:Michael Schumacher yi:מיכאל שומאכער zh:迈克尔·舒马赫This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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