How does Lewis Hamilton stack up against Michael Schumacher and F1’s all-time greats?

Lando Norris takes on quick-fire questions during a hot lap. Watch the US Grand Prix on ESPN2. (1:34)

Lewis Hamilton’s sixth championship has moved him to outright second on the all-time champions list.

It means 2020 could be a record-setting year for the British driver. Here are the key statistics of Hamilton’s career so far, a look at how close he is to claiming some of the most prestigious records in Formula One and how he compares to some of the sport’s all-time greats.

1. Michael Schumacher – 7

2. Lewis Hamilton – 6

3. Juan Manuel Fangio – 5

4. Sebastian Vettel, Alain Prost – 4

5. Jack Brabham, Jackie Strwart, Niki Lauda, Nelson Piquet, Ayrton Senna – 3

1. Michael Schumacher – 91

2. Lewis Hamilton – 83

3. Sebastian Vettel – 53

4. Alain Prost – 51

5. Ayrton Senna – 41

1. Juan Manuel Fangio – 52 entries, 24 wins (46.51 percent)

2. Alberto Ascari – 33 entries, 13 wins (39.39 percent)

3. Jim Clark – 73 entries, 25 wins (34.25 percent)

4. Lewis Hamilton – 248 entries, 83 wins (33.47 percent)

5. Michael Schumacher – 308 entries, 91 wins (29.55 percent)

1. Michael Schumacher – 221

2. Kimi Raikkonen – 212

3. Lewis Hamilton – 211

4. Fernando Alonso – 202

5. Sebastian Vettel – 194

1. Michael Schumacher – 155

2. Lewis Hamilton – 149

3. Sebastian Vettel – 119

4. Alain Prost – 106

5. Kimi Raikkonen – 103

Hamilton holds one F1 record which looks like it will take some beating…

1. Lewis Hamilton – 87

2. Michael Schumacher – 68

3. Ayrton Senna – 65

4. Sebastian Vettel – 57

5. Jim Clark, Alain Prost – 57

To put that tally into perspective, behind Vettel there is a big gap to the other active drivers on the grid to have claimed a pole position in qualifying.

The current list behind Vettel is: Kimi Raikkonen (18), Valtteri Bottas (11), Charles Leclerc (6), Daniel Ricciardo (3), Robert Kubica, Nico Hulkenberg and Max Verstappen (1). Leclerc has claimed all six of his this season — while that’s impressive, at that rate it would take 13 more seasons to match Hamilton’s current mark.

http://www.espn.com/espn/rss/news