From shock wins to dramatic comebacks, Formula 1 has seen some of the most impressive charges through the field to reach the podium. Here are ten of the most extraordinary:
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Nico Hülkenberg – 2025 British Grand Prix
Starting 19th on the grid, Hülkenberg delivered a determined drive in tricky conditions at Silverstone, climbing to third place and finally securing his first F1 podium for Kick Sauber—a result few predicted before the race. -
Rubens Barrichello – 2000 German Grand Prix
Barrichello lined up 18th after qualifying issues but carved through the field in a race of changing weather and chaos. He handled crashes, Safety Cars, and heavy rain to take his maiden F1 win, breaking down in tears on the podium. -
Max Verstappen – 2024 Brazilian Grand Prix
After qualifying setbacks and a grid penalty left Verstappen 17th, he stormed through the pack in a rain-hit, red-flagged race. Taking the lead from Esteban Ocon past halfway, Verstappen was untouchable, claiming a stunning victory. -
Carlos Sainz – 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix
Sainz started last (20th) after qualifying problems but made a one-stop strategy work, finishing fourth on the road. A post-race penalty for Lewis Hamilton promoted Sainz to third, earning his first F1 podium and McLaren’s first since 2014. -
Ayrton Senna – 1984 Monaco Grand Prix
In just his fifth Grand Prix, Senna started 13th and mastered the wet streets of Monaco. He charged to second behind Alain Prost, and though he crossed the line first when the race was stopped, countback kept him second—a breakthrough moment for the future champion. -
Sergio Perez – 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix
After being spun to last on lap one, Perez surged through the field, capitalized on Mercedes’ misfortunes, and claimed his first F1 win in his 190th start—securing a Red Bull seat for 2021. -
Lewis Hamilton – 2016 Belgian Grand Prix
Hamilton started from the back after engine penalties but avoided early chaos and steadily climbed to third, becoming the first driver to podium from 20th or lower on three occasions and limiting points loss in a championship fight. -
Jenson Button – 2011 Canadian Grand Prix
In the longest F1 race ever, Button overcame six pit stops, a puncture, a drive-through penalty, and a last-lap overtake on Sebastian Vettel to win, having dropped to last after early incidents. -
Jim Clark – 1967 Italian Grand Prix
Clark led from pole but a puncture dropped him a lap down. He fought back to the lead with eight laps to go, only for a fuel issue to drop him to third—a drive still revered as one of his greatest. -
Sebastian Vettel – 2012 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
Excluded from qualifying, Vettel started from the pit lane, overcame early damage, and battled through the field to finish third—helping secure his third world title in a fiercely competitive season.
Bonus: John Watson – 1983 United States Grand Prix West (Long Beach)
Watson started 22nd after a poor qualifying but carved through the field to win by 27 seconds, a record for the lowest grid slot to victory that still stands.
These drives highlight the resilience, skill, and strategic brilliance that define Formula 1’s most remarkable comebacks.
