2002 Formula One Season 【RECENT】

Two decades on, the 2002 FIA Formula One World Championship remains the ultimate case study in sporting hegemony. It was the year Ferrari didn’t just win—they erased the competition. It was the year Michael Schumacher didn’t just claim a third consecutive title—he clinched it in July, with six races left on the calendar.

It was the season that forced the FIA to rewrite the rules: new qualifying formats, points system changes, and eventually, the V8 era to cut costs. Ferrari had become so good, they broke the game. 2002 formula one season

Ask any Formula One fan to describe the 2002 season in one word, and you’ll get two conflicting answers: “Masterpiece” or “Monotony.” Two decades on, the 2002 FIA Formula One

When dominance becomes art—and controversy It was the season that forced the FIA

But then the lights went out in Melbourne. The star of the show wasn't a driver—it was a machine. The Ferrari F2002, designed by Rory Byrne and Ross Brawn, was so advanced that Michael Schumacher famously refused to drive it in early tests because it felt too perfect.