The most dramatic final laps in F1 history

Three weeks ago, at the British Grand Prix, Lewis Hamilton provided what will likely become an iconic image as he scraped across the line to take a record seventh home victory on effectively three wheels.

A final-lap puncture – two laps after his teammate had suffered the same issue – saw his thirty second lead being agonisingly reduced by Max Verstappen. The World Champion would just about hang on, though, and take the chequered flag with a gap of just over five seconds to the charging Red Bull.

It was a dramatic final lap of what had been a somewhat processional race, but it was probably not the most dramatic. Here are a few contenders for that accolade…

2016 Austrian Grand Prix

Hamilton was chasing down his teammate, Nico Rosberg, for the lead as he attempted to close the gap in the championship after early-season reliability issues. The two Mercedes had come together in a costly way a few races earlier in Spain and, as Hamilton went to the outside of Turn Two on the final lap, they would do so again.

Rosberg tried to force Hamilton wide – a move he had been on the receiving end of numerous times – but went too far, damaging his front wing and limping home in fourth place with a 10-second penalty for good measure. Rosberg would go on to eventually claim the championship, nonetheless, after another costly engine failure for Hamilton late in the season.

2011 Canadian Grand Prix

The longest race in the sport’s history came right down to the wire. After numerous safety cars and a full, two-hour suspension for torrential rain, Sebastian Vettel started the final lap with Jenson Button breathing down his neck, a little over four hours after they had initially started the race.

Button had stopped no fewer than six times and at one point had been in last position, but his excellence in tricky conditions allowed him to scythe through the field and force Vettel into a mistake halfway round the final lap. The German ran wide onto a wet patch at Turn Six and Button came through to take a truly extraordinary victory.

2008 Brazilian Grand Prix

Whilst the lead of the race may not have changed hands, final laps don’t come much more dramatic than this. Hamilton needed fifth in the final race of the season to guarantee a maiden title, having excruciatingly missed out in similar circumstances the year before. But mother nature was not going to make things simple.

A wet-dry race saw heavy rain fall with a handful of laps remaining and a pit stop resulted in the young Briton rejoining in fifth. An equally young Vettel passed him on lap 69 of 71 and it looked as though Hamilton would miss out again as Felipe Massa took the victory that he required to become champion. However, Timo Glock had not stopped for wet tyres and Hamilton passed him on the final corner of the final lap of the final race to reclaim that crucial fifth position and win the championship.

1997 Hungarian Grand Prix

Damon Hill so nearly pulled off the ultimate underdog story at the Hungaroring in 1997. Having been dropped by Williams at the end of 1996, despite winning the world championship, Hill joined a struggling Arrows team, inspired by new boss Tom Walkinsaw’s grand plans. It didn’t work out as planned, though, and the champion had just one point as he arrived at the 11th race of the season.

Thanks to a unique mix of tyre complications, multiple retirements and brilliance from Hill, he found himself in a comfortable lead for most of the race. But, just a couple of laps away from Arrows’ first ever victory, his hydraulic pump failed and Hill was agonisingly passed by Villeneuve on the final tour. The problem was eventually put down to a broken washer worth 50 pence.

1982 Monaco Grand Prix

It seemed as though nobody fancied winning the 1982 Monaco Grand Prix. With three laps remaining and rain starting to fall, Alain Prost spun out from the lead, handing the lead to Riccardo Patrese, only for the Italian to spin, as well, one lap later. That left Didier Pironi in the lead, but his car would run out of fuel on the final lap. Andrea de Cesaris would have inherited the lead but had also run out of fuel and Derek Daly – the next man down the road – had just retired with a gearbox failure.

As James Hunt put it, “we’ve got this ridiculous situation where we’re all sitting by the start-finish line waiting for a winner to come past, and we don’t seem to be getting one”. Patrese had managed to restart his car, though, and eventually came through to take his first victory.

1971 Italian Grand Prix

The Italian Grand Prix in 1971 saw the closest ever finish to a race. It was also the final Italian Grand Prix to be run on the original layout; the enormous speeds reached that year saw two chicanes introduced in 1972 on safety measures.

The high speeds resulted in the field breaking up into packs, with the leading one consisting of eight drivers. Peter Gethin, Ronnie Peterson, François Cevert, Mike Hailwood and Howden Ganley battled all the way to the end, constantly in and out of each other’s slipstreams. They crossed the finish line covered by just 0.61 seconds, with less than two tenths covering the top four and Peter Gethin taking his sole F1 victory by 0.01 seconds.

1967 Italian Grand Prix

Jim Clark was cruelly denied victory in one of his greatest ever races at the 1967 Italian Grand Prix. The Scot led the race until lap 12 when he picked up a puncture and lost an entire lap. He then spent the next 48 laps fighting through the field at an astonishing rate, before taking the lead and pulling away.

Clark’s poor luck was not over, however, as on the final lap a faulty fuel pump slowed him significantly and allowed John Surtees and Jack Brabham to pass. Surtees took what would prove to be his final win by less than a car length at the line, as Clark coasted to a consolatory third place.

Honourable mentions must also go to: Nigel Mansell grinding to a halt whilst waving to the crowd at the 1991 Canadian Grand Prix; Didier Pironi and Gilles Villeneuve’s infamous scrap at Imola in 1982; Jack Brabham crashing at the final corner of the 1970 Monaco Grand Prix; and the four-way photo finish at Monza in 1969.

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