Oscar Piastri’s extraordinary reliability is becoming a decisive factor in his charge toward a maiden F1 drivers’ championship.
Following the Italian Grand Prix, the Australian now sits second in Formula 1’s all-time consecutive grand prix finishes record after surpassing Max Verstappen at Monza.
The McLaren driver extended his remarkable streak to 44 consecutive grand prix finishes at the Temple of Speed, moving past the Dutchman’s mark of 43 straight finishes that stretched from the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix in 2022 to last year’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
Only Lewis Hamilton’s formidable record of 48 consecutive finishes*, achieved between the 2018 British Grand Prix and 2020 Bahrain Grand Prix, now stands ahead of Piastri.
This consistency is proving invaluable in Piastri’s title fight, where he currently holds a commanding 31-point advantage over team-mate Lando Norris with eight rounds remaining.
The statistics paint a compelling picture: whilst Norris has suffered two costly retirements this season, including a self-inflicted crash in Canada and engine failure at Zandvoort, Piastri has methodically accumulated points.
If Norris had finished those two rounds, he likely would have collected an additional 28 points, meaning his deficit to Piastri would be just three.
Since his season-opening mishap at Melbourne, where the Australian spun onto the grass and tumbled to ninth, Piastri has not finished outside the top four in any subsequent race.
Piastri’s last non-finish dates back to his debut 2023 campaign at the United States Grand Prix. The 24-year-old could equal Hamilton’s record in Mexico and surpass it at the Sao Paulo Grand Prix.
With other active streaks trailing considerably, George Russell’s 26 consecutive finishes since the Dutch Grand Prix last year and Yuki Tsunoda’s 11-race run pale in comparison.
Even Verstappen’s earlier 31-race streak, which ended following contact with Kimi Antonelli in Austria, underscores how rare such consistency proves in modern Formula 1.
*Hamilton missed the Sakhir Grand Prix in 2020, meaning his run of consecutive finishes in grands prix he competed in reached 62, when he crashed with Verstappen in the 2021 Italian Grand Prix.
Check out the 10 longest consecutive finishing streaks in F1 history below.