
Autosport Awards
Autosport Awards 2018: Mika Hakkinen receives Gregor Grant Award
Mika Hakkinen celebrated the 20th anniversary of his first Formula 1 title with the third Gregor Grant Award of the 2018 Autosport Awards evening

Named in honour of Autosport's founder, these Awards are given in tribute to lifetime contributions to motorsport.
By the time Hakkinen arrived in F1 with Lotus in 1991, he was already a champion in Formula Ford 1600, Formula Opel Lotus and British Formula 3, and had come across future F1 rival Michael Schumacher in an infamous and contentious Macau Grand Prix battle.
Two seasons at Lotus were full of underdog heroics for the fading team, before in 1993 Hakkinen grabbed a tantalising opportunity at McLaren - where Ayrton Senna was uncertain over whether to continue.
In the event Senna committed to the season and Hakkinen found himself on the sidelines as a test and reserve driver, before getting his racing opportunity with McLaren parted with Michael Andretti after a disappointing F1 adventure for the CART Indycar star.

Hakkinen stunned Senna by outqualifying him in their first race as team-mates at Estoril, and then found himself leading McLaren when his three-time champion team-mate depending for his tragically shortlived Williams stint the following year.
At first Hakkinen had to bide his time as McLaren grappled with Peugeot engines and then tough initial seasons with Mercedes, but he finally became an F1 winner in the 1997 finale at Jerez.
When McLaren began 1998 with a crushingly dominant car, Hakkinen took control of the title race and fended off a subsequent surge from Schumacher and Ferrari to become McLaren's first champion since Senna and Finland's first since Keke Rosberg in 1982.
After his 1994 McLaren team-mate Martin Brundle presented the award to Hakkinen, the Finn said: "It's a long time ago [since the last title].
"If I go back 20 years it was an amazing time. I started with Team Lotus for a couple of years, up and downs, then joined McLaren - had some ups and downs too - and had an incredible time and great team-mates I learned a lot from."

Asked about his rivalry with Schumacher, Hakkinen said: "The happy memories were seeing him in the mirrors!
"He was certainly a great racing driver. There are different personalities in racing, and the list is long, but certainly Michael was a driver who was focused on every detail, very hard, to improve not only the car but the team.
"I've met Michael's son [Mick] a few times and it is great to see his strength and I hope he gets the success like his dad."
Hakkinen became a back-to-back F1 champion in 1999, this time after a dramatic fight with a surprise Ferrari contender in Eddie Irvine following Schumacher's leg-breaking accident.
He was also voted International Racing Driver of the Year at the Autosport Awards in both his F1 title-winning seasons.
Schumacher and Ferrari halted Hakkinen and McLaren's championship run in another extremely close battle in 2000.
Though Hakkinen raced on into 2001, and continued winning, he admitted that he was drained from the intensity of three of F1's most spectacular title fights and departed at the end of the year for what was billed as a sabbatical.
Despite some flirtations with the idea of an F1 comeback, in the end it was in the DTM with Mercedes that Hakkinen reappeared for a three-year stint from 2005-07 in which he was again a race-winner.


Previous article
Autosport Awards 2018 celebrates Jacky Ickx's career
Next article
Tom Gamble wins McLaren Autosport BRDC Award at Autosport Awards

Autosport Awards 2018: Mika Hakkinen receives Gregor Grant Award
The F1 and Indy 'nearly man' that found contentment in Japan
Having had the door to F1 slammed in his face and come within three laps of winning the Indianapolis 500, the collapse of a Peugeot LMP1 shot meant Japan was Bertrand Baguette's last chance of a career. But it's one which he has grasped with both hands
The female all-rounder who arrived "too early"
From Formula 3 to truck racing, Dakar and EuroNASCAR via a winning stint in the DTM, there's not much Ellen Lohr hasn't seen in a stellar racing career that highlights the merit in being a generalist. But she believes her career came too early...
How Radical's latest machines fare on track
The lightweight sportscar manufacturer has not rewritten the rulebook with its latest machines, but the new SR3 XX and SR10 still provide a step forward on its previous successful models
The real-life racing rogues stranger than fiction
The forthcoming Netflix film linking the world of underworld crime and motorsport plays on a theme that isn't exactly new. Over the years, several shady figures have attempted to make it in racing before their dubious dealings caught up with them
How a GP is thriving in a COVID-free territory
The New Zealand Grand Prix's mix of rising talent and big-name stars thrilled the crowds (yes, remember crowds?) assembled for the Toyota Racing Series meeting at Hampton Downs last weekend and left distant observers craving a repeat
How a much-changed Macau GP kept the party going
OPINION: The 67th edition of the Macau Grand Prix might have been a largely muted affair to the outside world without its international influx and star line-ups, another victim to the COVID-19 pandemic, but organisers deserve huge credit for keeping the party going
Engineer's view: Motorsport's revolutionary braking tool
Although brake pressure and temperature logging is commonplace, measuring and understanding braking performance hasn't been so straightforward. But that's about to change following the introduction of a groundbreaking new sensor
The high-tech materials helping Renault in its F1 rise
The Renault F1 team is at the vanguard of innovative solutions pushing development of the V6 turbo hybrid engine rules, embracing the full potential of material science in its bid to get back to the top