Welcome to my F1 driver power rankings. This will be a continuous series throughout the year where I will rank the current F1 drivers after every race to determine who truly holds all the power in the F1 paddock.
I hear you asking — How are you determining what power means? For me it is driver form, reputation, car performance, relative position within their team and record against teammate. All these will be taken into account when making my decisions.
These are my personal opinions and no one else’s.
The grid below is the power rankings before the season began. Underneath it is my first update after the Bahrain Grand Prix. I hope you enjoy, and please let me know if you think differently about the rankings in the comments section. However remember – “Extraordinary claims must be backed up by extraordinary evidence” (Lance Armstrong – when he was definitely cheating)
| 1. Lewis Hamilton | 2. Max Verstappen |
| 3. Charles Leclerc | 4. Sergio Perez |
| 5. Lando Norris | 6. Daniel Ricciardo |
| 7. Lance Stroll | 8. Fernando Alonso |
| 9. Pierre Gasly | 10. George Russell |
| 11. Kimi Raikkonen | 12. Sebastian Vettel |
| 13. Carlos Sainz | 14. Valtteri Bottas |
| 15. Esteban Ocon | 16. Yuki Tsunoda |
| 17. Antonio Giovinazzi | 18. Nikita Mazipin |
| 19. Mick Schumacher | 20. Nicolas Latifi |
After Bahrain Grand Prix (1 of 23)
1. Lewis Hamilton (-+)
Hamilton won the Bahrain Grand Prix with the lesser car and held on beautifully with Max Verstappen bearing down on him in the later stages. His monster 3rd stint on the hard compound showed off his tyre preservation skills that have become a trademark. Finishing well ahead of his teammate showed that Hamilton just gets more from the car in all departments and that speed proved the decisive factor in the end.
2. Max Verstappen (-+)
Verstappen should have won the Bahrain Grand Prix, make no mistake. Once again, some impatience from the Dutchman proved to be fatal when he overtook Hamilton off the track at the first opportunity when he could have waited and made an easier pass down the main straight, he had the car and tyre advantage to do so. This is something Hamilton has learnt over time and I fully expect Max to not make the same mistake again. A differential issue did affect his pace but it’s a team sport and the formula has be perfect. These two drivers are still the elite of F1 and Bahrain just confirmed that we have a hell of a fight on our hands for the title this year.
3. Charles Leclerc (-+)
Charles keeps his place on this podium with a fantastic 4th place in Qualifying and solid 6th in the race. His qualifying pace is quickly becoming a trademark after he routinely stuck last year’s Ferrari where it didn’t belong on the grid and that form has continued. Beaten by a consistent Norris and resurgent Perez on Sunday can’t really be argued with in an improved but not yet front running Ferrari.
4. Lando Norris (+1)
An assured and decisive drive from Norris topped an altogether solid start to the season for the young Brit. Beaten by his teammate on Saturday by half a tenth to 6th and 7th on the grid but he got ahead on lap 1 with what is becoming a trademark move – around the outside at Turn 4 – and again on Gasly at the lap 4 safety car restart. He pulled away steadily from the crowd behind through the pit stops to finish 6 seconds ahead of Perez but more relatively 20 seconds ahead of the sister McLaren.
5. Sergio Perez (-1)
A shock exit in Qualifying 2 having not being quick enough on the medium tyre did look reminiscent of the struggles previous Red Bull drivers not called Max Verstappen have had in recent years. However, this was equaled out by some calm thinking to manually restart his car after a power cut on the formation lap to save his race, albeit starting from the back. Arguably showing Red Bull’s decision to go with experience in the 2nd seat was a correct one. Consistent pace and some clinical overtaking got him to 5th. He drops just because of that unfortunate qualifying.
6. Lance Stroll (+1)
A quietly solid weekend for the Canadian driver combined with a slow, mistake ridden weekend for his teammate means he rises one place on this list. A Qualifying 3 appearance in this apparently much affected Aston Martin was a positive, followed by a P10 finish on Sunday after being overtaken by Yuki Tsonoda on the final lap. He had a good scrap with Alonso and Sainz but was always just slightly off the leading midfield runners. That is probably the maximum this team can expect at the moment. Despite the forever lingering knowledge that his Dad owns the team, Lance is starting to steadily prove that he deserves that seat on merit alone.
7. Daniel Ricciardo (-1)
We have since discovered that rear floor damage caused from contact with Gasly was costing Daniel performance throughout Bahrain’s race which does help explain the 20 second gap to his teammate ahead. This combined with beating Norris to 6th on the grid does make you wonder why I have dropped him down one place in the power rankings, but he was beaten in wheel to wheel combat by Norris before the damage occurred and Stroll’s relative position in his own team dealt this blow to Ricciardo. It’s a long season so lots of time to improve but a really solid start from the McLaren boys and girls.
8. Fernando Alonso (+-)
Fernando stays 8th in the power rankings following an expected and thoroughly Alonso-ey weekend. He comes back after 2 years away as a 40 year old, gets into Q3 (his teammate started 13th) and was solidly running into the points until a stray sandwich bag got caught in his brakes, causing them to overheat and forcing him to retire. His on-track performance was as if he never left. His retirement is the only reason he isn’t higher as a pointless weekend for the French team wasn’t the way they wanted to start 2021.
9. George Russell (+1)
Russell continued his Williams-teammate-qualifying-competition whitewash and beat an Alpine on Saturday, to then follow that up on Sunday by beating Vettel to the flag in another confidence building weekend. He had a nice tussle with Raikkonen during the race but the car still has a bit to go to get into that midfield battle. All George can do at this moment in his career is lead this team forward and outperform the car. I believe he is doing both excellently.
10. Pierre Gasly (-1)
A clumsy mistake trying to make up lost ground at the safety car restart ruined Gasly’s race in the short term and ended it in the long term. This was a disappointing end to a weekend that started so beautifully with a 5th place start on the grid. This Alpha Tauri is quick which was proved by both teammates in qualifying so this will feel like a missed opportunity to get solid points in what is going to be a monumental fight in the midfield this year. Gasly should be slightly anxious about that teammate of his as well.
11. Kimi Raikkonen (+-)
The Ice Man starts 2021 with a characteristic drive to maximise his car and minimise his race time to beat his teammate to the flag by 12 seconds after being beaten by him in qualifying. This Alfa Romeo looks like an improvement on last years to become a part of the midfield battle, which should give him opportunities to grab points with his seemingly endless supply of race pace in the latter stages of his career. I hope he never retires. Kimi for President.
12. Carlos Sainz (+1)
A solid opening weekend for Sainz for the Red Team with an 8th place finish in the race and only finishing 7 seconds behind Leclerc. I think the 6 tenths difference in qualifying says more about Leclerc’s confidence than Sainz’s lack of pace. I am sure Ferrari would have taken a double Qualifying 3 appearance on this power track after their recent struggles in that department. I think Sainz can be happy with his work in Bahrain.
13. Yuki Tsunoda (+3)
The hype continued from preseason into Bahrain as the young Japanese driver showed speed, aggression, creativity and consistency in his first F1 race weekend. Quite the combination to now back up. The highs of P2 in Qualifying 1 transformed quickly to lows with P13 in Qualifying 2 trying to get through on the medium tyre, showing the confidence of this Alpha Tauri team but backfiring on this occasion. He rose in the race to finish 9th with some brave late-braking moves, his pass on Alonso a particular highlight, while he experienced a race with F1 levels of dirty air and tyre degradation for the first time. His physical stature may deceive you, he is looking like a wolf in sheep’s clothing.
14. Valtteri Bottas (-+)
I may be being a bit mean to Valtteri with his placing on this list. He does drive a Mercedes and is quick enough on his day but it just feels like he is as far away from the title as he’s ever been. Hamilton’s status in the sport continues to rise and the Bahrain Grand Prix just highlighted the gap between them. Bottas once again faded in the race before a slow pit stop late really put the nail in the coffin. He can get on pole every now and then against Hamilton, but his consistent race pace is not good enough to challenge for the title seriously and that is the only objective if you drive the Silver Arrow in this hybrid era. George Russell coming in for one race last year and showing him up really didn’t help his cause. The reason Valtteri is this low is that I feel he has the least leverage in all of F1 to keep his race seat for 2022 and until proven otherwise he will stay here.
15. Sebastian Vettel (-3)
Seb suffered a tricky opening weekend in British racing green. He didn’t look comfortable as he got to grips with his new machine after only 2 days running during testing and practice. He was knocked out in Qualifying 1 to line up 18th until a 5 place penalty for not slowing sufficiently for yellow flags relegated him to last. He didn’t show much pace in the race either and had another clumsy accident, this time with Ocon at Turn 1. This collision was his 17th in 53 races, not the form of a 4 time World Champion. Crossing the line 2nd last in 15th place means it can only go up from here. Fingers crossed for him because it would be a sad decline for the German if this continues.
16. Esteban Ocon (-1)
Ocon got shown up by Alonso in Bahrain. Getting knocked out in Qualifying 1 to start 16th and then being in no-mans-land behind the midfield battle during the race was only saved by Alonso’s retirement. This means they are still level on points and Ocon can save some face. He is going to have to fix up and look sharp, and do it quickly.
17. Antonio Giovinazzi (-+)
Ghosts of Giovinazzi’s past mean that he starts low on this list for me. He has speed but loves an unforced error. He has been less mistake ridden since the 2nd half of last season but like Bottas he doesn’t have much leverage for me. Ferrari have some very promising youngsters coming through and two young stars in the works team so seats will be at a premium. Gio hasn’t shown enough yet to prove he deserves one. He needs to start beating Kim on Sundays to start getting in the conversation.
18. Mick Schumacher (+1)
Mick looked much the more assured Haas rookie in Bahrain. The car looks very slow and twitchy which is not a productive combination, but Mick unqualified his teammate by 8 tenths and was the only Haas to finish the race so it was a productive weekend for him. This car is looking so bad the main competition will be themselves this year so important to get that advantage early and get the team building around him.
19. Nicolas Latifi (+1)
Latifi continues to be overshadowed by his teammate with little fightback from the Canadian. He has yet to show me anything more than being a pay driver for this Williams team during his F1 career. The only reason he is 19th is because of how bad Mazipin’s weekend went.
20. Nikita Mazipin (-1)
He was spinning all weekend as he struggled to find the balance in his car. He spun in Qualifying 1 to bring out the yellow flags, that caught out Vettel, to be easily beaten by his teammate. Following that he had one of the shortest F1 debuts in history as he lost control of the car on the exit of Turn 3 to go straight to the scene of the accident and the end of an unconvincing weekend to say the least.