Nigel Mansell

Nigel Mansell
CBE
Mansell in 2014
BornNigel Ernest James Mansell
(1953-08-08) 8 August 1953 (age 70)
Upton-upon-Severn, Worcestershire, England
Championship titles
FIA World Drivers' Championship (1992)
CART Championship Car (1993)
Major victories
Michigan 500 (1993)
Formula One World Championship career
NationalityUnited Kingdom British
Active years19801992, 19941995
TeamsLotus, Williams, Ferrari, McLaren
Entries192 (187 starts)
Championships1 (1992)
Wins31
Podiums59
Career points480 (482)[1]
Pole positions32
Fastest laps30
First entry1980 Austrian Grand Prix
First win1985 European Grand Prix
Last win1994 Australian Grand Prix
Last entry1995 Spanish Grand Prix
Champ Car career
31 races run over 2 years
Best finish1st (1993)
First race1993 FAI IndyCar Grand Prix (Surfers Paradise)
Last race1994 Monterey Grand Prix (Laguna Seca)
First win1993 FAI IndyCar Grand Prix (Surfers Paradise)
Last win1993 Bosch Spark Plug Grand Prix (Nazareth)
Wins Podiums Poles
5 13 10
24 Hours of Le Mans career
Years2010
TeamsBeechdean
Best finishDNF (2010)
Class wins0

Nigel Ernest James Mansell, CBE (/ˈmænsəl/; born 8 August 1953) is a British retired racing driver who won both the Formula One World Championship (1992) and the CART Indy Car World Series (1993). Mansell was the reigning F1 champion when he moved to CART, becoming the first person to win the CART title in his debut season, and making him the only person to hold both the World Drivers' Championship and the American open-wheel National Championship simultaneously.

His career in Formula One spanned 15 seasons, with his final two full seasons of top-level racing being spent in the CART series. Mansell is the second most successful British Formula One driver of all time in terms of race wins with 31 victories, behind Lewis Hamilton with 104 wins, and is eighth overall on the Formula One race winners list, behind Hamilton, Michael Schumacher, Max Verstappen, Sebastian Vettel, Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna and Fernando Alonso.[2] He held the record for the most pole positions set in a single season, which was broken in 2011 by Sebastian Vettel. He also remains the last Formula One driver to win a race over the age of 40, which was the 1994 Australian Grand Prix.

Mansell raced in the Grand Prix Masters series in 2005, and won the championship title. He later signed a one-off race deal for the Scuderia Ecosse GT race team to drive their number 63 Ferrari F430 GT2 car at Silverstone on 6 May 2007. He has since competed in additional sports car races with his sons Leo and Greg, including the 2010 24 Hours of Le Mans, and was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2005.

  1. ^ Up until 1990, not all points scored by a driver contributed to their final World Championship tally (see list of points scoring systems for more information). Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.
  2. ^ "Lewis Hamilton happy to 'outsmart' Nico Rosberg at United States GP". BBC Sport. Retrieved 3 November 2014.