1998
What changed: Cars became narrower, reduced from 2m to 1.8m wide, and grooves were added to the tyres. Three on the front, four on the back, with the aim of helping drivers control their speed.
What happened: Schumacher was once again a force in his scarlet Ferrari, but even the German could not stop Mika Hakkinen in the McLaren, now with a Mercedes engine and painted to resemble the original Silver Arrows.
Hakkinen retained his title in 1999, holding off Eddie Irvine’s Ferrari and Heinz-Harald Frentzen’s Jordan in a topsy-turvy season that went down to the wire. Schumacher looked strong again, before a crash at the British Grand Prix saw the two-time champion miss half the season with a broken leg.
The German would win the next five titles however, becoming an unstoppable force in the sport with Ferrari, and moving ahead in the all-time list with seven championships.
He retired for the first time in 2006, having seen Spaniard Fernando Alonso claim two championships in a row with Renault.
2007 saw Lewis Hamilton burst onto the scene, narrowly missing out on a maiden-season championship with McLaren at the last race to Kimi Raikkonen, before the young Briton dramatically snatched glory on the final lap of the final race in Brazil a year later.