Formula One Season 2023 Highlights: Circuits, Cars, Drivers, Teams and the Most Dominant Year in F1 History
If 2022 was the year Formula One reset itself, 2023 was the year one team and one driver solved the reset completely. Red Bull Racing didn’t just win — they redefined competitive superiority. Max Verstappen didn’t just defend his title — he obliterated records that once seemed untouchable.
Yet, paradoxically, 2023 was not a dull season. Beneath the overwhelming dominance at the front lay:
While the regulations aimed to reduce dirty air and increase overtaking, 2023 exposed a fundamental truth of Formula One: engineering excellence always finds separation.
The result was unprecedented:
Ferrari’s SF‑23 showed flashes of speed — particularly in qualifying — but suffered from tyre degradation and inconsistent race pace.
Both teams were fighting each other rather than the leader.
That illusion did not last.
It was a reminder that dominance does not remove the need for brilliance.
The race became a symbol of how execution — not just speed — could still defeat dominance on the right day.
His 2023 achievements included:
This was not just the best car — it was the best organisation on the grid.
Sergio Pérez’s early victories faded as consistency issues emerged. Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton occasionally challenged for poles or podiums, but never sustained pressure.
This raises an uncomfortable question:
Despite driving the most dominant car on the grid, Pérez:
In reality, it was one of the most revealing seasons in Formula One history:
Max Verstappen and Red Bull Racing set a standard so high that it forced the entire grid to rethink not just development paths, but expectations themselves.
If 2022 reset Formula One, 2023 locked in its future.
Introduction: When the New Era Became a Dynasty
The 2023 Formula One World Championship will be remembered as the season where debate shifted from who would win to how dominant is too dominant.If 2022 was the year Formula One reset itself, 2023 was the year one team and one driver solved the reset completely. Red Bull Racing didn’t just win — they redefined competitive superiority. Max Verstappen didn’t just defend his title — he obliterated records that once seemed untouchable.
Yet, paradoxically, 2023 was not a dull season. Beneath the overwhelming dominance at the front lay:
- One of the tightest midfield battles in modern F1
- Multiple development races within the same regulations
- A fascinating collapse and recovery arc for several teams
- A growing tension between spectacle and sporting integrity
Context: The Second Year of the Ground‑Effect Era
From Reset to Refinement
The 2023 season was the second year of the ground‑effect regulations introduced in 2022. Historically, the second year of any major ruleset is where:- The best interpretation becomes dominant
- Performance gaps widen
- Innovation shifts from concept to optimisation
While the regulations aimed to reduce dirty air and increase overtaking, 2023 exposed a fundamental truth of Formula One: engineering excellence always finds separation.
The Cars That Defined the 2023 Season
Red Bull RB19: The Most Complete F1 Car Ever Built
The Red Bull RB19 is widely regarded as the most dominant Formula One car in history. It combined:- Exceptional aerodynamic efficiency
- Supreme tyre preservation
- Outstanding straight‑line speed
- Minimal degradation across race distances
The result was unprecedented:
- Red Bull won 21 of 22 races
- Verstappen won 19 races
- The team achieved the highest winning percentage in F1 history
Mercedes and Ferrari: Chasing Shadows
Mercedes entered 2023 having abandoned their radical 2022 concept. While performance improved, the W14 never truly threatened Red Bull.Ferrari’s SF‑23 showed flashes of speed — particularly in qualifying — but suffered from tyre degradation and inconsistent race pace.
Both teams were fighting each other rather than the leader.
Circuits and Races That Defined 2023
Bahrain: A Statement of Intent
The season opener immediately confirmed fears. Verstappen won comfortably, controlling the race from start to finish. Sergio Pérez followed him home, underlining Red Bull’s advantage before development had even begun.Saudi Arabia and Azerbaijan: The Only Internal Tension
The briefest hint of intrigue came early in the season, when Sergio Pérez won in Saudi Arabia and Azerbaijan. For a moment, it appeared Red Bull might face an internal championship battle.That illusion did not last.
Monaco: Precision Over Power
Monaco provided one of the season’s most impressive drives, as Verstappen mastered changing conditions to secure victory in a race where margins were measured in millimetres.It was a reminder that dominance does not remove the need for brilliance.
Singapore: The One That Got Away
The Singapore Grand Prix was the only race Red Bull did not win in 2023. Carlos Sainz claimed victory in a tactical masterclass, managing pace and positioning to hold off faster cars.The race became a symbol of how execution — not just speed — could still defeat dominance on the right day.
Who Won the 2023 Formula One World Championship?
Max Verstappen: Redefining Greatness
Max Verstappen secured his third consecutive World Drivers’ Championship, doing so with such authority that traditional comparisons struggled to keep up.His 2023 achievements included:
- 19 race victories (a single‑season record)
- Winning streaks that rewrote the history books
- Championship secured with multiple races remaining
Red Bull Racing: Near‑Perfect Execution
Red Bull secured the Constructors’ Championship with ease, completing the most dominant team season ever recorded. Operational errors were rare, strategy calls were decisive, and reliability was exceptional.This was not just the best car — it was the best organisation on the grid.
Who Nearly Won? And Was There Ever a Title Fight?
Unlike 2021 or early 2022, there was no genuine title fight in 2023.Sergio Pérez’s early victories faded as consistency issues emerged. Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton occasionally challenged for poles or podiums, but never sustained pressure.
This raises an uncomfortable question:
- Does dominance diminish sporting value?
The Driver Who Suffered Most: Sergio Pérez Under the Spotlight
While many drivers struggled, Sergio Pérez’s 2023 season stands out as uniquely punishing.Despite driving the most dominant car on the grid, Pérez:
- Qualified inconsistently
- Struggled in traffic
- Failed to convert car advantage into sustained results
The Midfield: Where 2023 Was Truly Fought
Aston Martin’s Early Surge
Aston Martin began the season strongly, with Fernando Alonso securing multiple podiums early on. While the team faded as others developed, their early‑season form was one of 2023’s genuine surprises.McLaren’s Transformation
McLaren delivered one of the most dramatic mid‑season turnarounds in modern F1. From early‑season struggles to consistent podium contenders, their recovery became a case study in development efficiency.Ferrari vs Mercedes: A Strategic Cold War
Ferrari and Mercedes spent most of the season trading advantages circuit‑by‑circuit. Neither could close the gap to Red Bull, but their internal battle defined the fight for second place.Why the 2023 Season Matters
At first glance, 2023 appears straightforward — almost boring.In reality, it was one of the most revealing seasons in Formula One history:
- It exposed how regulation cycles truly work
- It showed the ceiling of ground‑effect optimisation
- It reframed how dominance is evaluated in modern F1
- It confirmed Max Verstappen as the benchmark of his generation
Conclusion: The Season That Set an Impossible Standard
The 2023 Formula One World Championship was not defined by controversy or chaos. It was defined by perfection — or as close as Formula One has ever seen.Max Verstappen and Red Bull Racing set a standard so high that it forced the entire grid to rethink not just development paths, but expectations themselves.
If 2022 reset Formula One, 2023 locked in its future.