Stirling Moss would have won the world championship in 1958 if he hadn't gone to the stewards and got Mike Hawthorn un-disqualified from a race. The stewards disqualified Hawthorn from the Portuguese grand prix but Moss disagreed with their descision went to teh stewards and got him reinstated. Hawthorn came second that race got 7 points and ended up winning the championship by 1 point from Moss
And also, important to state, that Badoer WOULD have had points in the current situation and got desperately unlucky SO many times. He deserves better than what he's remembered for, honestly.
@@bubblewrapvillain Yeah, the Ferrari F60 was a heap of rubbish and very difficult to get your head around, it took Massa, Kimi and Ferrari quite a few races to understand the car, and Massa and Kimi were absolute top tier drivers at the time, Fisi and Badoer were doomed from the start as neither would be given enough time to understand the car
3:38 To be fair, I think drivers who eventually got their wins should be counted for this as well. That would put 4 drivers tied for 1st position. Depailler, Alesi, Hakkinen and Irvine already had 15 podiums before their first win. So, that gives Sainz a little bit more headroom :)
5:13 Um... Felipe Massa didn't come back until the start of the 2010 season. Ferrari replaced him with Force India's Giancarlo Fisichella and it happened right after his fluke pole and 2nd place finish in the 2009 Belgian Grand Prix.
@UCN5fBrC-xoOeuKFkWF_cKBQ Perez broke his wins duck at his 190th attempt, by winning the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix (and so far has scored two wins since joining Red Bull). Andrea de Cesaris never won a Grand Prix
This is in NASCAR, but J.D McDuffie started 653 races over 27 years without a single win. Wasn’t a bad driver by any means. He had 106 top 10’s throughout his career. That start number could’ve been higher had he not died in a crash in 1991.
@@trevorhintz1290 I've heard of him, I think it unfair for people to think of him as the guy who died in the 1991 Budweiser at the Glen. If he had access to more funding, I'm sure that he could have scored at least one win. S1apSh0es also mentioned how he never finished on the lead lap in his 653 attempts
He was robbed of a win at Spa in the Jordan because of mechanical failure. His teammate didn't even make it passed the first couple of corners (although he did go on to win 91 times so...).
Here's one for someone to work out. Most F1 test laps driven without ever being entered for a race - I remember a driver called Emmanuel Collard who always came up in articles about F1 testing in the 1990s but never got a shot at driving competitively. There may be others who have done even more.
De Cesaris achieved 19 consecutive DNFs (I'm including his disqualified at Monaco in 1986 for Minardi), while still missing the last 5 races of 1985 after Guy Ligier fired him, so it could've potentially been 24 consecutive DNFs if Ligier hadn't fired him. The only reason he kept getting jobs in F1 was due to his Marlboro sponsorship, which brought in money to smaller teams that they needed to survive. He was fast but a bit too reckless with the cars - he lost a number of points-scoring positions due to mistakes and mechanical failures. He managed just 2 finishes for Brabham in 1987 (with the very powerful BMW turbo engine, but shocking car reliability in general), on the podium at Spa and outside the points in Australia.
His father had a high ranking position with Philip Morris, hence the Marlboro sponsorship. To be fair, he put in some amazing drives in subpar machinery (getting a freaking *Rial* on the podium is an achievement not discussed nearly enough) and these long DNF streaks were in some really fragile machinery. It wasn't his fault the 1987 Brabham - another unlikely car he managed to push to a podium finish - self-destructed at the slightest provocation.
@@hernansalto-dumbattemptracing You're right. I could have sworn he'd gotten the Rial on the podium at one point, but it was actually a Dallara in 1989.
Needs to be a part 2 to this video: Most runner up finishes in the championship without winning a title. Most last place finishes in a career. Fewest laps completed in a season (must have competed in every race)
* Most entries without starting: Claudio Langes (14) * Most failed attempts to pre-qualify: Gabriele Tarquini (25) * Longest time between successive wins: 7 years (Riccardo Patrese, 1983 to 1990) * Longest time between successive podium finishes: 8 years (Alexander Wurz, 1997 to 2005) * Longest time between successive points finishes: 9 years (Robert Kubica, 2010 to 2019) Also: Ernst Loof was 2:17 off the pace... but he wasn't last on the grid. There was Ernst Klodwig (7 seconds behind Loof) and three drivers who didn't set a time in qualifying!
Lewis Hamilton holds the record for the most wins in a season without winning the championship (10 in 2016). He also holds the record for the second most wins in a season without winning the championship (8 in 2021).
To be fair to Walker, Chapman put all his concentration into Fittipaldi and his car. He couldn't get any support as a rookie, then as time went on, Chapman paid less & less attention to him. He was on a hiding to nothing.
He would have had one, but he decided to be a gentleman instead. He chose honor and got a disqualified rival reinstated. Who earned I think 7 points that race and later had one more than moss.
Andrea De Cesaris also owns the record for most races without a win (208) and most retirements in an F1 career (147). Bonus one : Most races for an F1 team without a win : 382 for Arrows/Footwork
Massa didn't come back for the rest of 2009! Giancarlo Fisichella finished that season for Ferrari. Probably due to his performance at Spa. Then retired from F1 racing at the end of the season. Michael was heavily rumoured to return but was still suffering from a bike accident.
1:06 From what I remember, back in the day Colin Chapman was rumoured to be highly favouritist of his drivers, and it's entirely possible that, while Fittipaldi's car was a title contender, Walker was left with a comparative rustbucket.
@@MrSniperfox29 Problem is: Mazepin was recognized as one of the 20 regular drivers of the 2021 grid. And he got booted to 21st at the end of the season, by a reserve driver who only participated in 2 races, and moreso one with a handicap. So yeah, the contention stands, and MazeSBin has to carry that stigma.
The most starts without finishing a race is definitely my favorite. My question is how does a guy keep a job if he can't finish a race 18 times to then match that record later on? It's unbelievable. And then you have guys like Sergio Perez who nobody wanted until Red Bull gave him a seat and now he's competing for a Championship.
Sergio Perez be like: -Most races before first pole position -Most races before first win If he only had most races before first fastest lap, it would be a nice hat trick...
Is it kind of a record that Brundle drove for Tyrrell, Williams, Brabham, McLaren, Ligier, Benetton, and Jordan - all race winning teams - but only once did those years coincide with an actual winning car (Benetton in 1992).
Driver who has killed the most people: Christopher Wilder. An Australian driver who entered the 1984 Miami GP, Christopher Wilder was also known as "The Beauty Queen Killer," a serial killer who used his status as a race driver and photographer to lure in victims at the GP. I realize it's not a race record, but it is something that is not talked about at all in racing history but pops up a decent amount in the true crime world. Correction: he raced in the support races, not the f1 race. There are some sources that say he tried to qualify for the f1 race but failed.
Matt, you missed out the record that Charles now holds. He has the record for the most pole positions that he didn't convert into a win. He took it of off JPM in Baku I believe
That must be in percentage then and the only for people who have more than a certain amount of poles. Because in absolute sense lewis has lost the most races from pole as he has 103 poles and only won 61 of them.
Just found it. Even in percentage it isn't the case. There are 3 drivers with 5 poles with no win and of the drivers that did win from pole arnoux has the worst statistic with 2 wins out of 18.
@@emiel1206 yeah, Lewis failed to win from 42 pole position, Senna from 36, Schumacher from 28, Vettel from 26 and Piquet from 19. In terms of percentage, there are plenty with a 100% didn't-win-from-pole record, usually because they have one pole (Hülkenberg, Stroll, Norris and Pérez for example). In terms of a grander number, René Arnoux stared from pole 18 times, and only went on to win two of those races (11% of the races he started on pole).
In terms of shortest career Mario Dominguez is worth mentioning. His whole F1 career lasted only 1 lap during testing for Jordan in Silverstone in 2005. Conditions were too bad to drive for the most of the time given, so he drove only 1 lap and that's it. And he never got a chance to compete in official sessions and tests again.
@@ChuyR. Well, Carlos has a contract with Ferrari till 2024... I can't imagine him racing for 2 and a half seasons more without a single win. With Mick it's a matter of opportunity. He's still a bit far away from that undesirable record.
There is also one more: Shortest time from career start / session start to a Penalty: Sebastian Vettel when he was with BMW Sauber in Friday’s free practice sessions at the 2006 Turkish Grand Prix. Vettel was fined for speeding in the pit lane just 9 seconds into his Formula 1 career.
Enjoyed this video. I'd forgotten about DeCesaris's DNF record. That banner about Badoer being slower than someone's grandma-ouch! Poor Chris Amon. Definitely the unluckiest of all time.
05:13 Massa didn't return for the rest of 2009. Giancarlo Fisichella moved from Force India to replace Badoer. Vitantonio Liuzzi then replaced Fisichella at Force India. Sadly Giancarlo Fisichella then showed how difficult the 2009 Ferrari was to drive, by not being much of an improvement on Badoer.
Good ole’ anti-jinx on Carlos Sainz by WTF1, says he may break the record for most podiums without a win, then immediately wins at Silverstone to make sure he doesn’t take that record home
Two big things wrong regarding the facts around Luca Badoer: it wasn't Massa who replaced him after Spa (this is the other way round after Felipe's horror crash in Hungary), it was Fisichella. Also, it Spa where he was 14th and way behind Kimi, who won that race, not around Valencia
Best story about Hans Heyer is that he participated in Le Mans 12 times and never Finished, but never because of a crash always because the car broke down... Won 4 WEC races though so quick guy
I have a record for you guys: Not being able to even check Wikipedia to get a name right: It's "Hülkenberg" not whatever you were imagining when writing his name. (yes, even English Wikipedia has it right, you just had to copy and paste.)
Andrea was driving some seriously unreliable machinery when he scored that double 18 DNFs. Then again, Andrea was also pretty harsh on his equipment at times, and I'm not even talking about the many, many accidents he had.
to be fair to Badoer: - he didn't race in the past 10 years before his comeback, but he was a key element with his testing during early 2000 in ferrari - testing was not allowed anymore and that ferrari was hard to drive. He was not replaced by Massa (who came back in 2010) but by Fisichella, which was close to won the Spa gp that same year which Kimi only won thanks to a safety car and his KERS (Force india didn't have it, it had more pace but lacked straight line speed). Fisichella didn't score a point either in his last races of the season in a ferrari
Minor correction at 5:10. Felipe Massa didn't come back after the Belgian Grand Prix, and remained out for the rest of the season. Instead, his seat, which was being filled by Badoer, was given to Giancarlo Fisichella, who had just (at the Belgian Grand Prix) taken Force India's first ever pole position and podium (2nd place). Fisichella was, however, unable to score a single point in his 5 races for Ferrari (his best result was 9th in his first race for the team at Monza).
Once Mario Andretti said of Chris Amon "if he became an undertaker, people would stop dying". Andrea de Cesaris I guess still holds the record of flips in just one crash, that famous muddy at Osterreichring in 1985
The 2019 Haas should have a record for most race positions lost during a Grand Prix. Romain and Kevin would qualify in the top 10 only to finish 19th and 20th or not finish at all.
Lando Norris now has the title of most podiums without a race win (14 as of Australia 2024). He also has the most career points in F1 without a race win (660). Hulkenberg takes second on that list (533) and thus makes him the driver with the most number of points never to achieve a podium finish.
“Sainz is going to need to get a victory soon”
Sainz at the British GP 5 days later: “Hold my beer”
This is what he needed to do it
Or "Hold my Sangria"
yeah Sainz didnt know he had no win until he saw this video
One of my favourites is one of Seb's: Shortest time elapsed before earning a penalty, which was 9 seconds for speeding in the pit lane.
Didn't he end up being the fastest driver in that session too?
@@ELSTERLING if nothing else he was definitely the fastest through the pit lane...
Some sources even claim it was 6 seconds...
it was not speeding, but spinning in the pork and, and it was 6 secs
it was not speeding, but spinning in the pork and, and it was 6 secs
Stirling Moss would have won the world championship in 1958 if he hadn't gone to the stewards and got Mike Hawthorn un-disqualified from a race. The stewards disqualified Hawthorn from the Portuguese grand prix but Moss disagreed with their descision went to teh stewards and got him reinstated. Hawthorn came second that race got 7 points and ended up winning the championship by 1 point from Moss
Absolutege gentleman Sir Stirling Moss was
No way💀
Congratulations, you played yourself
Stirling Moss will always be known for being a very kind bloke. He'd rather lose with dignity than win unfairly. Absolute legend.
R. I. P king
Matt: "It's time for these drivers to show off their records!"
The drivers in question: "please don't..."
lol 😂
ua-cam.com/users/shorts4J_yRBybW1o?feature=share
Thankfully they won't notice for a few years and then still take ages to complain about it
it was giancarlo fischicella who replaced badoer in 2009 and he didn’t do much better. massa retuned in 2010
Yes, and Badoer was meant to do the rest of the 2009 season but was so bad, Ferrari were forced to get in Fisichella to replace him
And also, important to state, that Badoer WOULD have had points in the current situation and got desperately unlucky SO many times. He deserves better than what he's remembered for, honestly.
And he scored 0 points as well
I remember being shocked at Fisichella being so bad right after fighting for the win at Spa. Was it ever explained why?
@@bubblewrapvillain Yeah, the Ferrari F60 was a heap of rubbish and very difficult to get your head around, it took Massa, Kimi and Ferrari quite a few races to understand the car, and Massa and Kimi were absolute top tier drivers at the time, Fisi and Badoer were doomed from the start as neither would be given enough time to understand the car
another unwanted record would be shortest career elapsed before getting a penalty, held by vettel at 9 seconds
I’ve seen six seconds on some other sites, but whether it’s 6 or 9 seconds I doubt it will get broken anytime soon.
@@trevorhintz1290 6 or 9 😉
What does the record even mean
@@GameOver-nm2us it took him 9 seconds in his whole career before getting a penalty
@@arminhorvath- ah oke thx lmao
most poles without taking a victory (5)
Charles Leclerc: Lemme give that record a try.
he has 4 wins though...
Have you been following F1 at all?
3:38 To be fair, I think drivers who eventually got their wins should be counted for this as well. That would put 4 drivers tied for 1st position. Depailler, Alesi, Hakkinen and Irvine already had 15 podiums before their first win. So, that gives Sainz a little bit more headroom :)
Sainz is trash 💀
We could say something similar about the record of most wins without a title (5:19). Nigel Mansell had 29 wins before clinching his title.
@@Nico_M. its mental to think nigel only had 1 title. Remember in 89 he either broke down or won/scored podium?
@@Nico_M. and Verstappen had 19. But those stats fits on "most wins before first title" etc
@@someoneintheinternet7443 and 86-87
5:13 Um... Felipe Massa didn't come back until the start of the 2010 season.
Ferrari replaced him with Force India's Giancarlo Fisichella and it happened right after his fluke pole and 2nd place finish in the 2009 Belgian Grand Prix.
Not to mention that the race Kimi won was Spa, not Valencia.
@@CraigMitchell44 😂 damn this is a really poorly researched video
@@melissapetzer3560 you take these WTF1 guys outside of Lewis Hamilton and the rest of brits and they're completely lost
@@melissapetzer3560 Maybe they can go for "most mistakes about F1 stats in a single video.
That 2nd place in Spa wasn't a fluke though, the man passed KIMI RAIKKONEN at Eau Rouge & Raidillon. Brilliant, top quality driver
5:11 Apologies for correcting but Massa didnt return until 2010, Fisichella was the one to finish the season
Andrea de Cesaris also holds the record for most starts in the sport without a win, 208
Carlos: Imma beat that
@UCN5fBrC-xoOeuKFkWF_cKBQ Perez broke his wins duck at his 190th attempt, by winning the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix (and so far has scored two wins since joining Red Bull). Andrea de Cesaris never won a Grand Prix
This is in NASCAR, but J.D McDuffie started 653 races over 27 years without a single win. Wasn’t a bad driver by any means. He had 106 top 10’s throughout his career. That start number could’ve been higher had he not died in a crash in 1991.
@@trevorhintz1290 I've heard of him, I think it unfair for people to think of him as the guy who died in the 1991 Budweiser at the Glen. If he had access to more funding, I'm sure that he could have scored at least one win. S1apSh0es also mentioned how he never finished on the lead lap in his 653 attempts
He was robbed of a win at Spa in the Jordan because of mechanical failure. His teammate didn't even make it passed the first couple of corners (although he did go on to win 91 times so...).
3:35: I think Sainz listened to you 😂 He won in Silverstone a moment ago 👍
Here's one for someone to work out. Most F1 test laps driven without ever being entered for a race - I remember a driver called Emmanuel Collard who always came up in articles about F1 testing in the 1990s but never got a shot at driving competitively. There may be others who have done even more.
He's been doing great in the World Endurance Championship for a while now
@@vibecheck663 That add up - a good test driver and a good endurance driver share many of the same skills. Obviously drives with his brain.
De Cesaris achieved 19 consecutive DNFs (I'm including his disqualified at Monaco in 1986 for Minardi), while still missing the last 5 races of 1985 after Guy Ligier fired him, so it could've potentially been 24 consecutive DNFs if Ligier hadn't fired him. The only reason he kept getting jobs in F1 was due to his Marlboro sponsorship, which brought in money to smaller teams that they needed to survive. He was fast but a bit too reckless with the cars - he lost a number of points-scoring positions due to mistakes and mechanical failures. He managed just 2 finishes for Brabham in 1987 (with the very powerful BMW turbo engine, but shocking car reliability in general), on the podium at Spa and outside the points in Australia.
De Cesaris was always an oddball. He was like our good old friend Mr Maldonado, but even quicker… and more reckless.
His father had a high ranking position with Philip Morris, hence the Marlboro sponsorship.
To be fair, he put in some amazing drives in subpar machinery (getting a freaking *Rial* on the podium is an achievement not discussed nearly enough) and these long DNF streaks were in some really fragile machinery. It wasn't his fault the 1987 Brabham - another unlikely car he managed to push to a podium finish - self-destructed at the slightest provocation.
@@zombiedodge1426 Podium with Rial? He was 4th in Detroit 1988
@@hernansalto-dumbattemptracing You're right. I could have sworn he'd gotten the Rial on the podium at one point, but it was actually a Dallara in 1989.
@@zombiedodge1426 Yeah,in Canada
Needs to be a part 2 to this video:
Most runner up finishes in the championship without winning a title.
Most last place finishes in a career.
Fewest laps completed in a season (must have competed in every race)
@Kuromori I think it would be Moss with three.
@@blipblop5757 It is Moss, but with 4.
That last one goes to Maze🅱️in, who had lots and lots of DNFs and also finished several GPs a few laps down.
Fun fact: Nick Heidfeld has the exact same record of most podiums without a victory in Formula E as well
That's the Heidfeld-curse :) He is cursed not to win an FIA sanctioned Top-Tier-Race :)
Has Heidfeld won any races in the 21st Century?
They don't call him 'Quick Nick' for nothing
* Most entries without starting: Claudio Langes (14)
* Most failed attempts to pre-qualify: Gabriele Tarquini (25)
* Longest time between successive wins: 7 years (Riccardo Patrese, 1983 to 1990)
* Longest time between successive podium finishes: 8 years (Alexander Wurz, 1997 to 2005)
* Longest time between successive points finishes: 9 years (Robert Kubica, 2010 to 2019)
Also: Ernst Loof was 2:17 off the pace... but he wasn't last on the grid. There was Ernst Klodwig (7 seconds behind Loof) and three drivers who didn't set a time in qualifying!
How many drivers were even on the grid then when Ernst loof participated
Lewis Hamilton holds the record for the most wins in a season without winning the championship (10 in 2016). He also holds the record for the second most wins in a season without winning the championship (8 in 2021).
He also holds the record for biggest clown and winer
@@erikdejong9728 Shock. A Dutch comment.
shows how crazy fast he, Rosberg and Verstappen were in these years
Verstappen having a higher win percentage when Leclerc takes pole than Leclerc
Fastest penalty after carrier-start: Sebastian Vettel speeding in the pit lane on his way to his first free practice :D
To be fair to Walker, Chapman put all his concentration into Fittipaldi and his car. He couldn't get any support as a rookie, then as time went on, Chapman paid less & less attention to him. He was on a hiding to nothing.
Also, with the current points system he would have got at least 3.
So basically Red Bull from 2019 and 2020? :P
Love it how Matt says that Carlos Needs a win and Carlos win the British GP. *Matt Predicts once more*
Sainz be like "My time has come for my name be written in F1 history books"
Sainz Sr: Not those records, no!
Wait till tomorrow, he has a chance
Let’s see about today.
He just won the British GP lol
@@norbertkocsis5945 Yeah, really happy for him!
I am so sad about Mr.Moss. One of the legends of the sport though without a title.
He would have had one, but he decided to be a gentleman instead. He chose honor and got a disqualified rival reinstated. Who earned I think 7 points that race and later had one more than moss.
Moss was to F1 what Mark Martin is to NASCAR: The greatest driver to never win a championship
@@adenkyramud5005 It's respectable, but just stupid, no one will remember him for being a gentleman for 1 race
Moss > Hamilton
Andrea De Cesaris also owns the record for most races without a win (208) and most retirements in an F1 career (147).
Bonus one :
Most races for an F1 team without a win : 382 for Arrows/Footwork
Massa didn't come back for the rest of 2009!
Giancarlo Fisichella finished that season for Ferrari. Probably due to his performance at Spa.
Then retired from F1 racing at the end of the season.
Michael was heavily rumoured to return but was still suffering from a bike accident.
Very unique video idea, love all the research that went into it!
Edit: The craziest record is the last one…and that he did it twice!
WTF1 Made this exact video a while ago. I think they uploaded this list of drivers more than twice in the past.
@@wouterwillems1827 Okay? That’s nice.
@5:11 massa back? They got Fisichella to race for them. Massa was out for the rest of the season because of a spring from Barichello's car.
3:40 Sainz proved you wrong WTF1 😂😂😂
1:06
From what I remember, back in the day Colin Chapman was rumoured to be highly favouritist of his drivers, and it's entirely possible that, while Fittipaldi's car was a title contender, Walker was left with a comparative rustbucket.
3:38 aged so well
Nikita Mazepin - Finishing a season at a lower place than the regulated number of competitors: 21st out of a 20-driver grid.
Latifi is in contention this year
@@suryansakrabani-vinas3273 He's ahead of Hulkenberg now
@@machineee oh yeah. Maybe next year...or not
In 2020 there were 22 drivers on the 20 driver grid so this “record” doesn’t really work
@@MrSniperfox29 Problem is: Mazepin was recognized as one of the 20 regular drivers of the 2021 grid. And he got booted to 21st at the end of the season, by a reserve driver who only participated in 2 races, and moreso one with a handicap.
So yeah, the contention stands, and MazeSBin has to carry that stigma.
Im pretty sure you missed one.
Most poles without a title - Rene Arnoux (18).
3:35
Carlos watching this: *and I took that personally*
You can remove that Sainz burn now...
The most starts without finishing a race is definitely my favorite. My question is how does a guy keep a job if he can't finish a race 18 times to then match that record later on? It's unbelievable. And then you have guys like Sergio Perez who nobody wanted until Red Bull gave him a seat and now he's competing for a Championship.
3:37 AND HE GOT IT!
Sergio Perez be like:
-Most races before first pole position
-Most races before first win
If he only had most races before first fastest lap, it would be a nice hat trick...
Carlos Definetly watched this video
Yet another great video edit by Katie! ;)
Is it kind of a record that Brundle drove for Tyrrell, Williams, Brabham, McLaren, Ligier, Benetton, and Jordan - all race winning teams - but only once did those years coincide with an actual winning car (Benetton in 1992).
Driver who has killed the most people:
Christopher Wilder.
An Australian driver who entered the 1984 Miami GP, Christopher Wilder was also known as "The Beauty Queen Killer," a serial killer who used his status as a race driver and photographer to lure in victims at the GP. I realize it's not a race record, but it is something that is not talked about at all in racing history but pops up a decent amount in the true crime world.
Correction: he raced in the support races, not the f1 race. There are some sources that say he tried to qualify for the f1 race but failed.
3:38
Carlos Sainz: say no more amigo
Matt, you missed out the record that Charles now holds. He has the record for the most pole positions that he didn't convert into a win. He took it of off JPM in Baku I believe
That must be in percentage then and the only for people who have more than a certain amount of poles. Because in absolute sense lewis has lost the most races from pole as he has 103 poles and only won 61 of them.
Just found it. Even in percentage it isn't the case. There are 3 drivers with 5 poles with no win and of the drivers that did win from pole arnoux has the worst statistic with 2 wins out of 18.
@@emiel1206 yeah, Lewis failed to win from 42 pole position, Senna from 36, Schumacher from 28, Vettel from 26 and Piquet from 19. In terms of percentage, there are plenty with a 100% didn't-win-from-pole record, usually because they have one pole (Hülkenberg, Stroll, Norris and Pérez for example). In terms of a grander number, René Arnoux stared from pole 18 times, and only went on to win two of those races (11% of the races he started on pole).
Ah okay then, I just remember sky sports talking about it at the Baku GP
2:02
Hold my beer Ill show you slow xD
2:12 Max Chilton is looking fly today.
Well, I'm watching this vid after the 2022 Silverstone gp and there we go, Sainz finally got his win!
And good on him!
Eyy you bois hyped for the Silverstone GP?
And finally lose for Hamilton
Hope this years british grand prix is exciting
@ max stans always crying about Lewis and him living in their heads rent free 🤣 😂 . No one even mentioned Lewis as well
Im rooting for russell finishing on the podium ahead of ham.
No, the track is unbelievably boring...
Happy to report Carlos finally got his Grand Prix win this weekend in Silverstone. VAMOS!
"Carlos Sainz is going to have to get a victory soon."
Here we are a week later
The type of videos you never expect to come out
In terms of shortest career Mario Dominguez is worth mentioning. His whole F1 career lasted only 1 lap during testing for Jordan in Silverstone in 2005. Conditions were too bad to drive for the most of the time given, so he drove only 1 lap and that's it. And he never got a chance to compete in official sessions and tests again.
I think that Mick Schumaher and Carlos Sainz can brake 2 of these records
They can but eventually they will score points and win a race respectively and return the records back to their current owners.
@@soundscape26 will they though?
@@ChuyR. Well, Carlos has a contract with Ferrari till 2024... I can't imagine him racing for 2 and a half seasons more without a single win.
With Mick it's a matter of opportunity. He's still a bit far away from that undesirable record.
@@soundscape26 can't disagree with that
@@ChuyR. well Britain just laugh at us and Mick and Carlos broke the curse :)))))
There is also one more: Shortest time from career start / session start to a Penalty: Sebastian Vettel when he was with BMW Sauber in Friday’s free practice sessions at the 2006 Turkish Grand Prix. Vettel was fined for speeding in the pit lane just 9 seconds into his Formula 1 career.
Enjoyed this video. I'd forgotten about DeCesaris's DNF record. That banner about Badoer being slower than someone's grandma-ouch! Poor Chris Amon. Definitely the unluckiest of all time.
Quite a few is due him crashing
@@sarelras4103 No doubt. They didn't call him "DeCrasheris" for nothing.
Carlos just saw this and is like shit aight
Great video matt,
Even better edits Katy 😂
#dontmissthejoke
I really enjoyed the Edit. Thnx Katie 😉
😂😂
05:13 Massa didn't return for the rest of 2009. Giancarlo Fisichella moved from Force India to replace Badoer. Vitantonio Liuzzi then replaced Fisichella at Force India. Sadly Giancarlo Fisichella then showed how difficult the 2009 Ferrari was to drive, by not being much of an improvement on Badoer.
UPDATE: Sainz won a race.
5:02 Kimi only won the Belgian GP. He did not win in Valencia.
Out of contexts But I have had the best banana today
This gave me the motivation I needed today
I too had the best banana today. It is clearly a banana day.
Good ole’ anti-jinx on Carlos Sainz by WTF1, says he may break the record for most podiums without a win, then immediately wins at Silverstone to make sure he doesn’t take that record home
Two big things wrong regarding the facts around Luca Badoer: it wasn't Massa who replaced him after Spa (this is the other way round after Felipe's horror crash in Hungary), it was Fisichella. Also, it Spa where he was 14th and way behind Kimi, who won that race, not around Valencia
We don't have to wait long to see Carlos on top step of the podium after this video 😂
0:45 that was a case of his car's rear axles locking up under braking, not his mistake.
Best story about Hans Heyer is that he participated in Le Mans 12 times and never Finished, but never because of a crash always because the car broke down... Won 4 WEC races though so quick guy
Carlos must have watched this video. Kudos to him!
I have a record for you guys: Not being able to even check Wikipedia to get a name right: It's "Hülkenberg" not whatever you were imagining when writing his name. (yes, even English Wikipedia has it right, you just had to copy and paste.)
Glad Carlos won't be the next Heidfeld after today!
Andrea was driving some seriously unreliable machinery when he scored that double 18 DNFs. Then again, Andrea was also pretty harsh on his equipment at times, and I'm not even talking about the many, many accidents he had.
7:26 I tried wiping my phone lmao
Heidfeld still holds that record.
One of my favorites:
Most laps led in f1:
Bernd Maylander (600+)
600+? 🤔 i know he’s driven the SC for years now but that’s a big number.
And just like that, Sainz broke the curse
Hah, "Sainz has to win soon" -> Wins his first race directly afterwards
3:35 this aged well after the British GP
to be fair to Badoer:
- he didn't race in the past 10 years before his comeback, but he was a key element with his testing during early 2000 in ferrari
- testing was not allowed anymore and that ferrari was hard to drive. He was not replaced by Massa (who came back in 2010) but by Fisichella, which was close to won the Spa gp that same year which Kimi only won thanks to a safety car and his KERS (Force india didn't have it, it had more pace but lacked straight line speed). Fisichella didn't score a point either in his last races of the season in a ferrari
Minor correction at 5:10. Felipe Massa didn't come back after the Belgian Grand Prix, and remained out for the rest of the season. Instead, his seat, which was being filled by Badoer, was given to Giancarlo Fisichella, who had just (at the Belgian Grand Prix) taken Force India's first ever pole position and podium (2nd place). Fisichella was, however, unable to score a single point in his 5 races for Ferrari (his best result was 9th in his first race for the team at Monza).
3:39 SAINZ WON AT SILVERSTONE ❤❤🎉🎉
This video was the boost Carlos Sainz needed 😂🤣
5:15
In 2009 Badoer was replaced by Fisichella, who scored 0 points for ferrari as well
Great said sainz just won.
0:30 I litearlly jumped off laughing when I recognize this crying man
Once Mario Andretti said of Chris Amon "if he became an undertaker, people would stop dying". Andrea de Cesaris I guess still holds the record of flips in just one crash, that famous muddy at Osterreichring in 1985
3:38 well that aged well.
The 2019 Haas should have a record for most race positions lost during a Grand Prix. Romain and Kevin would qualify in the top 10 only to finish 19th and 20th or not finish at all.
Kevin just fokin smashed the door, that's unacceptable
Chris Amon's record just blew my mind, first time hearing about that - just when I thought I already read/heard about all of the crazy records...
3:11
Jimmer is that you?!!
My favourite unwanted F1 record is David Coulthard 1998 Belgium grand prix when he caused the greatest crash of all time and wrecked 14 cars.
All those wheels rolling all over the place.
Tbh I would quit like Hans Heyers record it is kind of cool
Sainz watched this video and did the Kubrick stare the whole time, apparently
Awesome video Katy, enjoyable as always
Its almost like Carlos was watching this video
Lando Norris now has the title of most podiums without a race win (14 as of Australia 2024). He also has the most career points in F1 without a race win (660). Hulkenberg takes second on that list (533) and thus makes him the driver with the most number of points never to achieve a podium finish.
Did you guys synchronize this with "The Race" and their vid about the most unique records? 😅
I was thinking the same thing, just watched that video before this lol
@@lPowerBaked420l Same
It's so weird that both you guys and The Race do a video on very similar subjects on the same day 🤔
sainz got his 1st win so no bad record for him yayyy
aged well for carlos
And as of this weekend passed, Sainz is safe from that record.