Power Rankings: The best and worst drivers of F1 2019

World Champions Lewis Hamilton and Valentino Rossi tried out each other’s sports on a track in Valencia. (1:42)

Following the conclusion of the 2019 Formula One season, we are doing our end-of-year rankings a little differently this year.

By looking at a drivers highest peak and lowest dips in our weekly Power Rankings, we can chart the consistent drivers, the late bloomers, those who had a rollercoaster year and then those who just had a year to forget. But, do the averages give a fair representation of every driver’s season? Let’s find out.

Average position: 1.75
Highest: 1st
Lowest: 5th

Verdict: Hard to argue. Take away the German Grand Prix and his clumsy clash with Alex Albon in Brazil (one race after wrapping up the championship) and there isn’t a blemish on Hamilton’s sixth title-winning campaign.

Average position: 1.96
Highest: 1st
Lowest: 5th

Verdict: Could easily have been number one. The eventual average finishing position was 1.75 to Hamilton and 1.96 to Verstappen, showing how close they were all year. Often they were simply swapping positions at the top. Verstappen was sublime in 2019 and his wins in Austria, Germany and Brazil were all memorable in their own way. This was the season Verstappen showed he is ready to beat Hamilton to a championship – now he just needs the car to do it.

Average position: 3.80
Highest: 1st
Lowest: 11th

Verdict: Propelled up the order by a four-week run at the top after his victory at the Belgian Grand Prix, it would be difficult to have put Leclerc lower. His season was not without big mistakes — crashing out of Q2 in Baku and his error-filled Monaco Grand Prix spring to mind — but he balanced that out with two brilliant wins, including a popular victory for Ferrari at Monza, and more pole positions than anyone.

Though Ferrari stumbled over itself on numerous occasions, usually Leclerc came out of those situations looking much better than teammate Sebastian Vettel, something the Power Rankings often reflected. The biggest mark of respect to Leclerc this year was that he took Ferrari’s preseason belief that Vettel was the driver to back and quickly tore it to pieces.

Average: 5.55
Highest: 2nd
Lowest: 19th

Verdict: Spot on. Even without a podium at the Brazilian Grand Prix, Sainz was the standout performer of 2019. The Spaniard may have been above Leclerc in the averages were it not for a slightly slow start to the year. Once Sainz found his groove, he was in masterful form — especially on Sundays — and has probably left Red Bull ruing the fact they ever let him leave the driver programme.

Average position: 6.9
Highest: 1st
Lowest: 14th

Verdict: Bottas is propped up by his strong start to the year. After six straight weeks in the top five, he never returned once the rot set in. Bottas 2.0 must be a year-long thing in 2020 if he wants any chance of beating Hamilton (or anyone else) to the title.

Average position: 7.45
Highest: 3rd
Lowest: 16th

Verdict: Lando Norris deserved his rookie of the year award. Norris was the youngest man on the 2019 grid but often raced like a seasoned veteran. There were some wobbles and he struggled to match Sainz in qualifying in the second half of the year, but given how well Sainz did it’s hard to judge him too harshly on that. McLaren has a real talent on its hands.

Average position: 8.05
Highest: 3rd
Lowest: 18th

Verdict: Very generous. He claimed a good win in Singapore and should have won in Canada and Russia. Beyond that, Vettel continued the run of mistakes which cost him the title in 2018 and, like with Daniel Ricciardo in 2014, was outperformed by a younger teammate over the year. Having yo-yo’d up and down our order all season, he’s lucky not to be lower.

Average position: 8.15
Highest: 4th
Lowest: 18th

Verdict: Ricciardo was probably the only consistently bright spot throughout Renault’s season. His lowest finish in the Power Rankings was after the race of the year and he stayed in the top ten from the French Grand Prix onwards. The Australian’s decision to leave Red Bull for Renault does not look great from a competitive standpoint, but 2019 did little to tarnish his standing on the grid.

Average position: 9.00
Highest: 3rd
Lowest: 14th

Verdict: Considering what he went through in his rookie season, he should be higher. After being thrown into the deep end at Red Bull he showed enough consistency to earn another season at the top team. Top priority in 2020 now must to be cutting the gap to teammate Verstappen and proving he belongs at that end of the grid.

Average position: 10.166
Highest: 4th
Lowest: 18th

Verdict: It’s easy to forget that early in the year Raikkonen looked like the standout midfield driver. The Finn faded later in the season, but his early form pushes him higher than most might have ranked him by this point.

Average position: 11.111
Highest: 5th
Lowest: 16th

Verdict: It was a low-key year for Perez, but he is still one of the most reliable hands in the midfield. He’s earned himself a big extension to 2022 and is part of an ambitious Racing Point team looking to force its way to the front of the grid.

Average position: 11.83
Highest: 4th
Lowest: 19th

Verdict: For someone who got a podium mid-year, you could argue he should be higher, but Kvyat’s season was fairly ordinary after the German Grand Prix. Red Bull’s decision to eliminate him from the discussion to be Max Verstappen’s teammate in 2020 hardly did his short- or long-term prospects any good, either.

Average position: 12.05
Highest: 7th
Lowest: 17th

Verdict: It’s always hard to judge a driver saddled with uncompetitive machinery. It’s even harder, still, when their teammate is returning from an eight-year hiatus. But we can only take the facts as we see them — Russell outqualified and outperformed Robert Kubica all year. It speaks volumes about his potential that Mercedes happily let Esteban Ocon walk to Renault knowing Russell is waiting in the wings.

Average position: 13.05
Highest: 8th
Lowest: 20th

Verdict: Outshone by Ricciardo all year, Hulkenberg also squandered his best chance at a podium since Brazil 2012 at the German Grand Prix. His slow, agonising slide off the circuit into the barrier summed up his career perfectly. No doubt he was talented, but F1 won’t miss a man who consistently failed to live up to the hype.

Average position: 13.222
Highest: 3rd
Lowest: 18th

Verdict: Haas had a horrible year, but Magnussen showed enough glimpses of his tenacious and punchy race craft to push himself up the order. A supreme qualifying performance at the Austrian Grand Prix is a great bright spot on an otherwise frustrating campaign.

Average position: 14.555
Highest: 4th
Lowest: 19th

Verdict: He could be lower. Grosjean struggled with a temperamental Haas car this year but seems to too often find himself in an incident with another driver. He might keep retaining his Haas drive, but his reputation seems to be diminishing with every passing season. His only top-ten Power Rankings appearance all year was after the season-opening Australian GP.

Average position: 15.222
Highest: 6th
Lowest: 19th

Verdict: Many people remain unconvinced about whether Stroll deserves a long-term place in F1, an opinion not helped by the fact he drives for a team owned by his father. He shows flashes of real skill from time to time but 2019 was far too unremarkable to warrant a place further up this list.

Average position: 16.11
Highest: 5th
Lowest: 20th

Verdict: Proof that sometimes averages don’t tell the whole story — Gasly deserves to be in the middle of the order after reviving his F1 career. Gasly spent much of his time at Red Bull rooted to the bottom of our Power Rankings because he was so far off the pace in a car capable of wins and podiums. His demotion back to Toro Rosso turned out to be just what he needed and a popular podium in Brazil capped a remarkable story.

Average position: 16.611
Highest: 10th
Lowest: 20th

Verdict: Antonio Giovinazzi did well to save his F1 career with a resurgence in form in the second half of the season, triggered by a top-ten finish in front of a home crowd at the Italian Grand Prix. He had looked ordinary before then and the jury is still out. With Mick Schumacher waiting in the wings Giovinazzi still has to prove he belongs in 2020 to ensure his career extends beyond then.

Average position: 19.2
Highest: 16th
Lowest: 20th

Verdict: As you can see from the averages, Kubica was comfortably last and that is a fair representation of his 2019 — he failed to get close to teammate George Russell all year. He claimed a rather fortuitous point at the German Grand Prix – that might have moved him off the bottom of the championship standings, but it wasn’t enough to do so on this list.

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