Formula One has seen many greats, but when it comes to the fastest F1 driver of all time, it’s .
That’s the conclusion Amazon Web Services came to when it decided to solve the question in a fair manner — with help from big data — to celebrate F1’s 70th anniversary. In the Tuesday announcement, AWS said it used data from all drivers since 1983 to build a machine-learning tool to analyze each driver’s pure performance based on qualifying laps. The performance was then compared to the driver’s teammate across the time range to build a web of interlinked performance data.
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It works like this: would be compared to 1994 teammate Damon Hill in a qualifying session. Hill would then be compared to Heinz-Harald Frentzen, who’d be compared to Nick Heidfeld, and so on until the present day. AWS said this approach created the data to compare drivers from different generations based on the “raw speed” of a qualifying lap. Otherwise, would sweep everything.
Although Senna takes the top spot, comes in second with a gap to Senna’s best of just 0.114 seconds. Behind the Ferrari legend is the current world champion poised to usurp so many of Schumacher’s records, Hamilton.
The list shows today’s F1 drivers are some of the fastest of all time, with the list full of drivers competing on the track nowadays. Youngsters Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc, both 22, are well up the top 10.
F1 drivers since 1983
Ranking | Driver | Timings |
---|---|---|
1 | Ayrton Senna | 0 |
2 | Michael Schumacher | 0.114 |
3 | Lewis Hamilton | 0.275 |
4 | Max Verstappen | 0.28 |
5 | Fernando Alonso | 0.309 |
6 | Nico Rosberg | 0.374 |
7 | Charles Leclerc | 0.376 |
8 | Heikki Kovalainen | 0.378 |
9 | Jarno Trulli | 0.409 |
10 | Sebastian Vettel | 0.435 |
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