ESPN takes a look at some of the best and quirkiest stats to come out of the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Lewis Hamilton extended his lead over Sebastian Vettel in the drivers' championship to 24 points after winning in Budapest for a record sixth time.

The Mercedes driver blitzed the field in a wet qualifying session before managing the race to perfection, finishing over 20 seconds clear of second-placed Vettel with Kimi Raikkonen once again rounding out the podium.

Daniel Ricciardo showed off his overtaking skills to fight from 12th on the grid to a hard-earned P4 but it was bittersweet for Red Bull who suffered yet another Renault engine failure, this time in Max Verstappen's car.

Race winner Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrates with his team after the Formula One Grand Prix of Hungary at Hungaroring. Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Stat focus: Hamilton's reaches 110 races at McLaren and Mercedes

The weekend's Hungarian Grand Prix marked the 110th Formula One race for Hamilton with Mercedes. That is actually quite significant given that he raced exactly 110 races for McLaren from 2007-2012.

Lewis Hamilton: McLaren vs. Mercedes McLaren Mercedes Wins 21 46 Poles 26 51 Podiums 49 77 Points 913 1,910 DNFs 18 8 Championships 1 3

Many believe his move to the Silver Arrows at the beginning of the 2013 season was a stroke of genius and it's hard to argue against the numbers. In the same amount of races, Hamilton has double the wins, almost double the pole positions and a stack more podium finishes. Hamilton is averaging 17.36 points per race at Mercedes while at McLaren it was down at 8.3.

He's also had far less reliability issues since crossing. In five and half seasons he's retired from a race just eight times, the same amount of DNFs he picked up at McLaren in his final two years.

Key stat: At McLaren, Hamilton won back-to-back races on just three occasions while at Mercedes he's managed it a staggering 24 times.

Oh, and what about championships? Hamilton claimed one title from six seasons at McLaren before going three from five at Mercedes. Few would back against him making it four this year to become just the sport's third five-time world champion.

Something you probably didn't know

At times he may be seen as Vettel's rear-gunner but Raikkonen is turning in one heck of a season, proving to Ferrari that he has what it takes to go around next season.

Raikkonen finished third in Hungary to extend his run of podiums to five races. The last time he achieved such a feat was way back in 2007 - the year he claimed his one and only world championship during his first stint at the Scuderia.

This season, only Hamilton (9) has claimed more podiums than Raikkonen (8) and after 12 races he sits third in the drivers' championship with 146 points - 18 more than at the same stage of 2017.

The question on everyone's mind is whether or not he can claim his first win in five and a half years. He's showing he still has the talent but will Ferrari let him?

Third place finisher Kimi Raikkonen of Finland and Ferrari celebrates on the podium during the Formula One Grand Prix of Hungary at Hungaroring. Dan Istitene/Getty Images

Fast facts:

4 - The amount of double podium finishes by Ferrari in 2018 (the most of any team).

2007-08 - The last time Red Bull went four consecutive races with at least one car not taking the chequered flag

P8 - Fernando Alonso's last four points finishes have all been for eighth place.

1 - Sergey Sirotkin is the only driver yet to score a world championship point in 2018.

Hungary - The first European country Hamilton has claimed six wins at.