Jenson Alexander Lyons Button MBE (born 19 January 1980) is a British Formula One driver currently signed to McLaren. He was the 2009 World Drivers' Champion. Button began karting at the age of eight and achieved early success, before progressing to car racing in the British Formula Ford Championship and the British Formula Three Championship. He first drove in Formula One with the Williams team for the 2000 season.
The  following year he  switched to Benetton, which in 2002 became Renault  F1, and then for the 2003  season he moved to BAR. They were  subsequently renamed Honda for the 2006  season, during which Button won  his first Grand Prix in Hungary, after 113  races. Following the  withdrawal of Honda from the sport in December 2008, he was  left  without a drive for the 2009 season, until Ross Brawn led a management   buyout of the team in February 2009, and Button suddenly found himself  in a  highly competitive, Mercedes-engined car. He went on to win a  record-equalling  six of the first seven races of the 2009 season, and  secured the 2009 World  Drivers' Championship at the Brazilian Grand  Prix, having led on points all  season; his success also helped Brawn GP  to secure the World Constructors'  Championship. For 2010, he moved to  McLaren, partnering fellow British racer and  former world champion  Lewis Hamilton. 
Button  is currently Britain's highest  Formula One point-scorer, with 567, due  in part to the new scoring system which  allocates more than double the  number of points that were allocated in the past.  Button was born on  19 January 1980 in Frome, Somerset and brought up in nearby  Vobster. He  was named after his father's friend Erling Jensen, changing the "e"  to  an "o" to differentiate it from Jensen Motors. He was educated at  Vallis  First School, Selwood Middle School and Frome Community College.  He is the  fourth child of South African-born Simone Lyons and former  Rallycross driver  John Button, who was well-known in the UK during the  1970s for his so-called  Colorado Beetle Volkswagen. After his parents  divorced when he was seven, he and  his three elder sisters were brought  up by their mother in Frome. He failed his  first driving test for  getting too close to a parked vehicle.
Button  began karting at the age of eight, after his father bought him his  first  kart, and made an extraordinarily successful start. In 1989, aged  nine, he came  first in the British Super Prix. He won all 34 races of  the 1991 British Cadet  Kart Championship, along with the title. Further  successes followed, including  three triumphs in the British Open Kart  Championship. In 1997, won the Ayrton  Senna Memorial Cup, and also  became the youngest driver ever to win the European  Super A  Championship. 
Aged  18, Button moved into car racing, winning the British  Formula Ford  Championship with Haywood Racing; he also triumphed in the Formula  Ford  Festival at Brands Hatch. At the end of 1998, he won the annual McLaren   Autosport BRDC Young Driver Award. His prize included a test in a  McLaren  Formula One car, which he received at the end of the following  year Button  entered the British Formula Three Championship in 1999,  with the Promatecme  team. He won three times —at Thruxton, Pembrey and  Silverstone—and finished the  season as the top rookie driver, and third  overall. 
He  finished fifth and second  respectively in the Marlboro Masters and  Macau Grand Prix, losing out by 0.035  seconds to winner Darren Manning  in the latter. At the end of 1999, Button had  his McLaren test prize at  Silverstone, and also tested for the Prost team. A  vacant race seat  became available at the Williams team, following the departure  of Alex  Zanardi, and team boss Frank Williams arranged a 'shoot-out' test   between Button and Formula 3000 racer Bruno Junqueira, with Button  securing the  drive. This made him Britain's youngest ever Formula One  driver. Button was  heavily hyped before his first race: former driver  Gerhard Berger described him  as a "phenomenon"; the head of his karting  team, Paul Lemmens, compared him to  Ayrton Senna; and Williams'  technical director Patrick Head said he was  "remarkably mature and  definitely a star of the future". 
However  some had  misgivings about his lack of experience and ability to cope  with the pressures  of Formula One. Following the buy-out of Brawn by  Mercedes, Button announced on  18 November 2009 that he would be leaving  the team to move to McLaren for the  2010 season. He signed a  three-year deal for a reported £6 million per season to  drive alongside  former world champion Lewis Hamilton. Button said he moved  because he  wanted the motivation and challenge from competing head-to-head with   Hamilton, and that Brawn GP had offered him more money. A number of  people,  including former Formula One drivers John Watson, Jackie  Stewart and Eddie  Irvine, believed the move was a mistake, and that  Button would struggle to  compete with Hamilton at McLaren. 
After  a seventh place finish in the opening  round in Bahrain, Button won the  second race in Australia from fourth on the  grid. Button was the first  to come in for slick tyres on a damp but drying  track, which lifted  him to second place after the other drivers had pitted. He  inherited  the lead when Vettel retired with brake problems and maintained his   lead to the end without changing his tyres again. His victory made him  the  thirteenth driver in Formula One history to have won Grands Prix  for at least  three different constructors. Following an eighth place  finish in Malaysia,  Button went on to win his second race of the season  from fifth on the grid in  China, by staying on slick tyres while most  of the other drivers pitted for  intermediates, he was promoted to  second place. However, the rain did not come,  and the other drivers had  to pit again for dry tyres.
Subsequently,  he went on  to lead the Drivers' Championship, with McLaren leading the  Constructors'  Championship. In Spain he was leapfrogged by Michael  Schumacher and finished a  frustrated fifth, before retiring in Monaco  due to an overheating engine on lap  three. As a result, Button lost his  lead in the Championship, dropping to fourth  behind both Red Bull  drivers and Alonso. Button then finished second in Turkey  after Red  Bull teammates Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, who were leading the   race, collided with each other. His own teammate Hamilton took the win,  after  the two of them briefly touched after a few corners of  wheel-to-wheel racing.  This promoted Button to second overall in the  Championship, just behind Webber.  In Canada he followed up this result  and remained second in the Championship, 3  points behind his teammate  Hamilton. At the European Grand Prix in Valencia,  Button finished 3rd  and maintained 2nd place in the title race.
Button  is known for having a very smooth driving style; journalist Mark Hughes   wrote in 2009, "Button has a fantastic feel for how much momentum can  be taken  into a corner and this allows him to be minimal in his  inputs—his steering and  throttle movements in particular tend to be  graceful and beautifully  co-ordinated." This allows him to perform well  in tricky conditions, such as his  maiden win in the 2006 Hungarian  Grand Prix. Many believe using his smooth style  he can conserve his  tyres better during race conditions than other drivers.  However, his  smooth style can also mean he struggles to generate the necessary  tyre  temperature on cool days or undemanding tracks.
Coupled  with his driving  style, Button has demonstrated intelligent race  decisions such as his pit stop  strategy during the 2010 Australian  Grand Prix. Jackie Stewart drew similarities  with the driving style and  racecraft of Alain Prost. In an interview in 2003,  Button said about  Prost: "His way of driving was so smooth. He is the person I  have  modelled myself on". However, he contradicted himself in 2009, when he   said, "I've never tried to model myself on anyone.I don't think many  people do  when they are pursuing their career." Parallels have also  been made with the  McLaren partnership and rivalry to 2008 World  Champion Lewis Hamilton to the  Prost-Senna rivalry of the 1980s, though  the latter clearly had a more  tempestuous relationship. Like many  Formula One drivers, Button resided in the  principality of Monaco but  he has since moved to Guernsey.
He  said that it was  the great training possibilities that took him away  from the tax haven. He also  has properties in the United Kingdom and  Bahrain. His hobbies include mountain  biking, competing in triathlons  and body boarding, and his car collection  includes a Nissan GT-R, a  1956 VW Campervan, a Honda S600 and a Mercedes C63  AMG. He previously  owned a blue on black Bugatti Veyron. He was engaged to the  actress and  singer Louise Griffiths before ending their five year relationship  in  May 2005. Button has two tattoos: a black coat button on his right  forearm;  and Japanese kanji-characters on his ankle which say "一番"  (Ichi ban, "Number  One" in Japanese), this was done before he won the  world title.
  Jenson Button Photos
Jenson Button Photos
Jenson Button Photos
Jenson Button Photos
Jenson Button Photos
 Jenson Button Photos


















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