Daniel Ricciardo

Australian race-car driver
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Also known as: Daniel Joseph Ricciardo
Quick Facts
In full:
Daniel Joseph Ricciardo
Born:
July 1, 1989, Perth, Western Australia, Australia (age 35)
Also Known As:
Daniel Joseph Ricciardo

Daniel Ricciardo (born July 1, 1989, Perth, Western Australia, Australia) is a race-car driver who debuted in Formula One (F1) in 2011 and became Australia’s most successful competitor in the sport in the mid-2010s. He had reached the podium (placing first, second, or third) in Grand Prix events 32 times during his career, eight of them being first-place finishes, by the time he was released by the team RB during the 2024 season.

Early career

Ricciardo began kart racing when he was nine years old and quickly moved up the competitive racing ranks. In 2006 he received a scholarship to begin his first season of driving in the junior Formula BMW series, in which he finished third in the Asian championship. The next year he moved to Formula Renault 2.0, another junior level of motor racing.

In 2008 Ricciardo began Formula Three (F3) racing, a class leading to F1 racing. There he had moderate success, including winning the Western European Cup in 2008 and the British F3 championship in 2009.

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F1 debut and success with Red Bull

In 2011 Ricciardo made his F1 debut with the Spanish team HRT. He then raced for Scuderia Toro Rosso, a team owned by the Austrian beverage company Red Bull, in 2012 and 2013, finishing both seasons well outside the top ten in the driver’s championship.

In 2014 Ricciardo became a member of the Red Bull Racing team alongside Sebastian Vettel, who had won his fourth consecutive championship the year before. Ricciardo won his first F1 race in 2014, at Canada. He also won in Hungary and Belgium. In 2016, driving alongside new teammate Max Verstappen, Ricciardo won the Malaysian Grand Prix. In both those years he placed third overall in the driver’s championship, his career highest finishes.

His other race wins at Red Bull included victories in Azerbaijan in 2017 and China and Monaco in 2018. He finished fifth and sixth in the driver’s championship those two years, respectively.

Moves to Renault and McLaren

Ricciardo left Red Bull and began racing for the Renault F1 team in 2019. He dropped to ninth in the driver’s championship but was able to move up to fifth again during the 2020 season. He then announced that he was leaving Renault and joining McLaren, beginning with the 2021 season.

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Ricciardo won the Italian Grand Prix in 2021 but finished only eighth in the driver’s championship that season. After a disappointing 2022 in which he placed 11th overall—far behind his McLaren teammate, Lando Norris—he failed to secure a seat on the starting grid at the beginning of 2023.

Back to the Red Bull fold

In the middle of the 2023 season, Ricciardo replaced one of the drivers at Scuderia AlphaTauri, the Red Bull–owned team formerly known as Toro Rosso where he had spent part of his early career. Soon afterward, he broke his left hand in a crash during practice for the Dutch Grand Prix and was sidelined for several months.

Despite his uneven performance in 2023, AlphaTauri announced that Ricciardo would continue racing for the team (later renamed RB). The 2024 season proved challenging for him: through 18 races, Ricciardo was among the top-10 finishers only three times, with eighth place his best finish, and he was 14th in the driver’s championship, 10 points behind his teammate, Yuki Tsunoda. In September, after the Singapore Grand Prix, RB announced that it was replacing Ricciardo with Liam Lawson for the season’s final six races.

During his time in F1, Ricciardo appeared regularly in the Netflix documentary series Formula 1: Drive to Survive, which began in 2019.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by J.E. Luebering.