From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of autoracing drivers
The
FIA Hall of Fame honours racing drivers. It was established by the
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) in 2017.
[1] The first inductees were the 33
Formula One world champions, followed by the 17
World Rally champions and the 28
World Endurance champions in 2019.
[2]
Inductees into the Hall of Fame
Inaugural class (2017)
Inductee
|
Nationality
|
Achievements
|
Giuseppe Farina |
Italy |
1950 Formula One World Champion
|
Mike Hawthorn |
United Kingdom |
1958 Formula One World Champion
|
Phil Hill |
United States |
1961 Formula One World Champion
|
John Surtees |
United Kingdom |
1964 Formula One World Champion
|
Denny Hulme |
New Zealand |
1967 Formula One World Champion
|
Jochen Rindt |
Austria |
1970 Formula One World Champion
|
James Hunt |
United Kingdom |
1976 Formula One World Champion
|
Mario Andretti |
United States |
1978 Formula One World Champion
|
Jody Scheckter |
South Africa |
1979 Formula One World Champion
|
Alan Jones |
Australia |
1980 Formula One World Champion
|
Keke Rosberg |
Finland |
1982 Formula One World Champion
|
Nigel Mansell |
United Kingdom |
1992 Formula One World Champion
|
Damon Hill |
United Kingdom |
1996 Formula One World Champion
|
Jacques Villeneuve |
Canada |
1997 Formula One World Champion
|
Kimi Räikkönen |
Finland |
2007 Formula One World Champion
|
Jenson Button |
United Kingdom |
2009 Formula One World Champion
|
Nico Rosberg |
Germany |
2016 Formula One World Champion
|
Alberto Ascari |
Italy |
2-time
Formula One World Champion (
1952,
1953)
|
Graham Hill |
United Kingdom |
2-time
Formula One World Champion (
1962,
1968)
|
Jim Clark |
United Kingdom |
2-time
Formula One World Champion (
1963,
1965)
|
Emerson Fittipaldi |
Brazil |
2-time
Formula One World Champion (
1972,
1974)
|
Mika Häkkinen |
Finland |
2-time
Formula One World Champion (
1998,
1999)
|
Fernando Alonso |
Spain |
2-time
Formula One World Champion (
2005,
2006),
2018–19 World Endurance Champion
|
Jack Brabham |
Australia |
3-time
Formula One World Champion (
1959,
1960,
1966)
|
Jackie Stewart |
United Kingdom |
3-time
Formula One World Champion (
1969,
1971,
1973)
|
Niki Lauda |
Austria |
3-time
Formula One World Champion (
1975,
1977,
1984)
|
Nelson Piquet |
Brazil |
3-time
Formula One World Champion (
1981,
1983,
1987)
|
Ayrton Senna |
Brazil |
3-time
Formula One World Champion (
1988,
1990,
1991)
|
Alain Prost |
France |
4-time
Formula One World Champion (
1985,
1986,
1989,
1993)
|
Sebastian Vettel |
Germany |
4-time
Formula One World Champion (
2010,
2011,
2012,
2013)
|
Juan Manuel Fangio |
Argentina |
5-time
Formula One World Champion (
1951,
1954,
1955,
1956,
1957)
|
Lewis Hamilton |
United Kingdom |
7-time
Formula One World Champion (
2008,
2014,
2015,
2017,
2018,
2019,
2020)
|
Michael Schumacher |
Germany |
7-time
Formula One World Champion (
1994,
1995,
2000,
2001,
2002,
2003,
2004)
|
Class of 2018
Inductee
|
Nationality
|
Achievements
|
Björn Waldegård |
Sweden |
1979 World Rally Champion
|
Ari Vatanen |
Finland |
1981 World Rally Champion
|
Hannu Mikkola |
Finland |
1983 World Rally Champion
|
Stig Blomqvist |
Sweden |
1984 World Rally Champion
|
Timo Salonen |
Finland |
1985 World Rally Champion
|
Didier Auriol |
France |
1994 World Rally Champion
|
Colin McRae |
United Kingdom |
1995 World Rally Champion
|
Richard Burns |
United Kingdom |
2001 World Rally Champion
|
Petter Solberg |
Norway |
2003 World Rally Champion, 2-time
World Rallycross Champion (
2014,
2015)
|
Walter Röhrl |
Germany |
2-time
World Rally Champion (
1980,
1982)
|
Miki Biasion |
Italy |
2-time
World Rally Champion (
1988,
1989)
|
Carlos Sainz |
Spain |
2-time
World Rally Champion (
1990,
1992)
|
Marcus Grönholm |
Finland |
2-time
World Rally Champion (
2000,
2002)
|
Juha Kankkunen |
Finland |
4-time
World Rally Champion (
1986,
1987,
1991,
1993)
|
Tommi Mäkinen |
Finland |
4-time
World Rally Champion (
1996,
1997,
1998,
1999)
|
Sébastien Ogier |
France |
8-time
World Rally Champion (
2013,
2014,
2015,
2016,
2017,
2018,
2020,
2021)
|
Sébastien Loeb |
France |
9-time
World Rally Champion (
2004,
2005,
2006,
2007,
2008,
2009,
2010,
2011,
2012)
|
Class of 2019
References
External links
|
---|
|
FIA World Championships | |
---|
FIA European Championships | |
---|
Presidents | |
---|
FIA Drivers' Categorisation | |
---|
FIA Motorsport Games | |
---|
Others | |
---|