How many tracks did Rubens Barrichello race at?

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Michael Schumacher will make his 300th appearance at an F1 race this weekend.

But one driver got there before him: his former team mate Rubens Barrichello. Ger Foley has a question about the driver whose F1 career ended with his 322nd start at home in Brazil last year:

As Rubens Barrichello has the most starts in F1, I would like to know how many countries has he raced in the world championship and also how many different circuits has he raced on in F1? Thanks
Ger Foley

Barrichello appeared in 326 races (making 322 starts) in 25 different countries as follows:

Country/iesGrands Prix
Italy33
Germany31
Spain25
Japan21
Great Britain20
Australia, Brazil, Hungary, Monaco19
Canada18
Belgium17
France16
Malaysia13
China, United States8
Austria, Bahrain, Turkey7
Argentina, Portugal, Singapore4
Abu Dhabi3
South Korea2
South Africa, India1

Barrichello began his F1 career in the 1993 South African Grand Prix at Kyalami – a venue F1 has not returned to since.

He made the most starts in countries which have held multiple races in a season. First among which is Italy, which had the Italian and San Marino Grands Prix (the latter held at Imola in Italy) until 2006.

Note that Barrichello failed to start on four occasions:

  • 1994 San Marino Grand Prix – did not qualify (injured)
  • 1998 Belgian Grand Prix – did not start (crashed in initial start before race was aborted)
  • 2002 Spanish Grand Prix – did not start
  • 2002 French Grand Prix – did not start

Here are the circuits he raced on, including the six tracks he visited in all 19 of his F1 seasons:

Circuit/sGrands Prix
Interlagos, Silverstone, Hungaroring, Monza, Monte-Carlo, Circuit de Catalunya19
Circuit Gilles Villeneuve18
Spa-Francorchamps, Suzuka17
Albert Park, Magny-Cours, Hockenheimring16
Nurburgring15
Imola14
Sepang International Circuit13
Shanghai International Circuit, Indianapolis8
A1-Ring, Bahrain International Circuit, Istanbul Park7
Buenos Aires, Valencia, Estoril, Singapore4
Yas Marina, Adelaide3
Jerez, Fujia, Korea International Circuit, TI Aida2
Donington Park1
Buddh International Circuit1
Kyalami1

Monza was Barrichello’s most successful circuit. He won there three times in 2002, 2004 and his final F1 victory for Brawn in 2009.

But he seldom enjoyed much luck at his home race. He retired nine times in a row at Interlagos from 1994 to 2003 – on the latter occasion he ran out of fuel while leading. His best result, third, followed in 2004, and was the only time he stood on the podium in front of his home crowd.

For comparison, here’s how the F1 calendar looked in Barrichello’s first and last seasons in F1:

1993 F1 calendar

RoundGrand PrixCircuit
1South AfricaKyalami
2BrazilInterlagos
3EuropeDonington
4San MarinoImola
5SpainCircuit de Catalunya
6MonacoMonte Carlo
7CanadaMontreal
8FranceMagny-Cours
9Great BritainSilverstone
10GermanyHockenheim
11HungaryHungaroring
12BelgiumSpa-Francorchamps
13ItalyMonza
14PortugalEstoril
15JapanSuzuka
16AustraliaAdelaide

2011 F1 calendar

RoundGrand PrixCircuit
1AustraliaAlbert Park
2MalaysiaSepang International Circuit
3ChinaShanghai International Circuit
4TurkeyIstanbul Park
5SpainCircuit de Catalunya
6MonacoMonte Carlo
7CanadaCircuit Gilles Villeneuve
8EuropeValencia
9Great BritainSilverstone
10GermanyNurburgring
11HungaryHungaroring
12BelgiumSpa-Francorchamps
13ItalyMonza
14SingaporeSingapore
15JapanSuzuka
16KoreaKorea International Circuit
17IndiaBuddh International Circuit
18Abu DhabiYas Marina
19BrazilInterlagos

NB. The Bahrain Grand Prix at Bahrain International Circuit was cancelled.

Since leaving F1 Barrichello has made a new home in IndyCar, where he has had to get used to circuits which are bumpier than F1’s and generally have much less run-off. He scored his best result to date with fourth at the Sonoma road course on Sunday.

See here for more statistics and details on Rubens Barrichello’s career:

And if you consider yourself an expert on him have a go at the F1 Fanatic Rubens Barrichello quiz:

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Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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25 comments on “How many tracks did Rubens Barrichello race at?”

  1. I’m not sure how much these drivers get to actually see the world when there at various circuits but I sure am jealous of them.

    He’s raced on every continent that inhabits human life. That’s a brilliant accomplishment.

    1. and several times !

      1. He raced in Africa only once, in the last race held at Kyalami

  2. I was wondering if his apparent weak performances at his home Grand Prix were just empirical, or actually based on something. For that, I did a quick calculation on average point per GP for different nations (using the current points system for every grand prix) and what I found was not surprising. Barrichello scored on average 2.4 points per Brazilian GP, which is (apart from the Indian, Luxembourg and South African GPs, which he only entered once or twice) the lowest average of all GPs. His next least succesful GPs were the Portugese (3.0), Belgian (4.0) and German (4.0) GP.

    While I was at it, I chechek whether the Italian GP was his most succesful of all GPs. It is true that he picked up more wins in Italy (three) than anywhere else. But if you look at point averages, the number for the Italian GP (8.1) is actually lower than for the Austrian (9.0) and European GP (10.0). Looking at the number of podiums, again the Italian GP (five) is past by the British and German GP (six). So I would say the European Grand Prix is his most succesful GP of all.

    1. Keith’s talking about circuits, not GPs, and since the European GP was held at 4 different circuits in 3 different countries over his career (Donington, Jerez, Nurburgring, Valencia), it seems silly to group them all together just because they shared the same arbitrary designation. And I think wins are more important than average points anyway.

      1. Keith’s talking about circuits, not GPs, and since the European GP was held at 4 different circuits in 3 different countries over his career (Donington, Jerez, Nurburgring, Valencia), it seems silly to group them all together just because they shared the same arbitrary designation.

        This only makes thing worse. Barrichello has raced 13 races at the Nurburgring, and apart from three occasions, he has always finished in the top 5 there, giving an average of 10.9 points.

        And I think wins are more important than average points anyway.

        In Barrichello’s case I would doubt that, because the number of times he has finished behind Schumacher on the podium is staggering. It not right to judge one’s performance by the number of wins alone.

      2. @racer Totally agree specially with the change in point calculation so a 5th place now is equivalent in point at a race win before, that’s quite a world of difference and probably influence your calculation … And I agree with what have been said, the wins count for much more than podium places which are themselves well above all other places, points or no points …

        I’m surprised he never raced at Zolder in Belgium, thought it was still on, but after a quick search found that it’s off the calender since 1984, quite some years before Rubens in F1

        1. @jeanrien no, I actually thought about that: I used the current point system for all his races, so that this doesn’t influence the calculations

          1. @andae23 and did you gave him back the wins stolen by Mickael under team radio ?
            Bad joke apart, the analysis is quite consistant in Rubens case, he has done enough race to have a significant sample of data. But those results in Brazil are quite surprising, maybe he got out of his racing bubble while at home and couldn’t manage anything good but drivers usually fancy having good result on home soil.

        2. It says that he used a consistent points system in @andae23 ‘s initial comment.

          For what it’s worth, I think the analysis is very interesting in terms of results, especially at his home race. Points mean more than just looking at wins in my opinion at least, unless you agree with Bernie’s Medals that is.

          1. @andae23 it’s a interesting take. Nice to look at Rubens career from your perspective, there’s a lot more to ones career than wins alone. Well done with all the calculations you made. You do need to get yourself a girlfriend though :)

          2. I too think it is a very interesting way to look at it @john-H,Carlito’s way. Especially indeed in the case of a driver like Barrichello it seems very defining to compare his podium tally with his wins in different years since as you say @andae23 he finished so often 2nd or 3rd behind Michael Schumacher.

          3. @Carlito’s-way I’m working on it ;)

    2. Not relevant, a driver prefers to win once than finishing 10 times second.

      1. Ask Stirling Moss.

    3. Interesting @andae23 Wondering how his career stats look in old points system. Because when less places count, you fight for those. Does it reflect in the stats then?

      1. Then Interlagos (0.4 points/GP) remains his worst circuit by far. His best circuit remains the Nürburgring (3.6), followed by Monza (2.6). So nothing has changed.

  3. OmarR-Pepper (@)
    28th August 2012, 17:40

    Barrichelo had a near miss in that San Marino accident… today I was watching a video on Youtube about Jum Clark, I honestly didn’t know he died on track (excuse my ignorance)… How many world champions or direct World Champion contenders have died on track? I know this question is off topic, sorry.

  4. So nah we need to know Micheal’s stats!

    1. It is going to be a long page to read. Could still serve at the end of this long summer brake :)

  5. I was debating with someone in the off-topic section of a non-F1 forum whether Barrichello or Bottas would be a better option for Williams in 2013. I said Bottas. What does everyone else think?

    1. Bottas of course.

      I mean, how many years he spent in a Championship winning car? He didn’t win any. You can talk all you want about him being forced to play number two, but in the end he decided to stay there.

      Though I would love to see Barichello joining Williams for 2013 and McLaren swooping Bottas.

  6. Michael might end up beating Rubens’s record, but I would say that Rubens finally has the edge over Michael in terms of performance. Seems to me that at this stage in their careers (300 races +) Rubens is quite simply driving better than Michael, not just that the drop off from his peak is less.

  7. I really do miss seeing Reubens on the starting grid. I agree that he was way past his best last year and that it was time for him to leave driving duties in F1. His mild and jovial manner made him one of the drivers whom I never formally supported but just liked watching race. I never saw him being disrespectful to another driver on or off track and never endangered anyone on track (unlike a certain Pastor M.). I think the only time I saw him lose it was when he threw his steering onto the track in Monaco I think, a couple of years ago.

  8. Thanks a mil for answering my question. great work, Keith!

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