Max Verstappen's recent seasons have produced statistics that may never be matched. Let us look at the data.
2023 season (record-breaking):
- 19 wins in 22 races. Source: Formula1.com.
- Win percentage: 86.4%. The highest single-season win rate in F1 history.
- 575 points. 290 points ahead of second place (Sergio Perez).
- Led 1,003 of 1,278 total racing laps (78.5%).
2024 season:
- Started dominant but McLaren and Ferrari closed the gap in the second half
- Still won the championship but the margin was significantly reduced
- 8 wins in 24 races, a major regression from 2023's historic pace
2025 season:
- Moved teams in a blockbuster deal that reshaped the grid
- The competitive picture shifted significantly with regulation changes
Is this good for the sport? The viewership data is mixed. Source: F1 media reports.
- Global viewership grew 8% in 2023 despite the dominance -- driven by new markets (US, Middle East)
- But race-day engagement (social media, live timing) dropped 12% in races where Verstappen led from pole to flag
- The Netflix effect (Drive to Survive) brought new fans who want drama, not processions
Historical context: Schumacher's Ferrari dominance (2000-2004) nearly killed F1 viewership in Europe. FIA responded with regulation changes. The 2026 regulations are specifically designed to close the gap between teams.
Sources:
- Formula1.com — season statistics
- F1 media audience reports
- Autosport — historical viewership analysis
The US market growth is the real story. F1 went from niche to mainstream in America in 3 years. Austin, Miami, and Vegas races are sold out. Verstappen dominance did not slow that.