Introducing Track Data: Every Circuit's History, One Click Away
A new interactive guide to every track on the calendar — pole records, pit stop trends, safety car frequency, and decades of winners, now live at inthemarbles.com/f1-track-data.
We've added a new page to In the Marbles: Track Data. It's a visual index of every circuit on the F1 calendar — click any track and get a full historical breakdown, right there in a pop-up, no digging required.

What's on the page
A grid of circuit cards, one per track, each showing the country, how many years of data we have, and who won there most recently. Click a card and a modal opens with everything we know about that circuit:
Historical Facts — the standout numbers for that track: longest win streaks by a single driver, whether champions tend to win there, best grid-recovery drives, and other patterns pulled straight from the results.
Qualifying — the fastest and slowest pole times we've recorded there, plus a full year-by-year qualifying history table (green for the fastest lap on record, red for the slowest).
Pit stops — median pit lane time (entry to exit) and average stops per car, both for the track overall and broken out season by season.
Race control — how often that circuit has seen a Safety Car, Virtual Safety Car, yellow flags, or red flags, year by year (available from 2023 onward, when F1 started publishing this data).
Winners — every driver and constructor who's won there in the last 20 years, ranked by win count.
Pole → Win conversion — how often pole position actually translates to a race win at that specific track, since some circuits reward track position far more than others.
All of it is current through this weekend — including races already run in the 2026 season, not just prior completed years.
Why we built it
Our Strategy Hub already breaks down team-by-team scenarios for the upcoming race, but it doesn't answer track-specific questions on its own: is this a one-stop or two-stop circuit historically? Does pole matter here? How chaotic has this race normally been? Track Data is built to answer exactly that, for any circuit, any time — not just the one coming up next.
Find it at inthemarbles.com/f1-track-data.