Biography
Michael Schumacher Biography
Michael Schumacher
For the moment let’s forget about the three seasons at and focus purely on the 15 complete seasons he raced in his ‘first career’. If you do that then many will come to the conclusion that Michael Schumacher is one the greatest Formula 1 drivers they have seen and even the .
Very few people change a sport single-handedly but Schumacher did and he holds all the records that count: Seven World Championships, 91 Grand Prix victories, 155 podiums. He also got 68 Pole Positions (second all-time) and 1566 career points. No superlatives could give those stats justice.
The name Schumacher first arrived in the sport back in 1991. If you would have been a rich man if you then had used your matchbook sign up bonus code for placing some bets on his later records. The German had earned himself a mid-season drive with replacing the imprisoned .
In a testing session at , Eddie Jordan wondered whether they had shortened the track as Schumacher was going so fast.
Ayrton Senna, Alain Prost and Michael Schumacher racing each other.
Despite being extremely fortunate to land the drive, he impressed around the magical circuit and qualified seventh before retiring on lap one in his first race.
Following that he had a contract in principle to race for Jordan the following season. But controversially he ended up at where he impressed further by and claiming his . A single success also followed in but Schumacher and Benetton made their real mark in 1994.
Tragically, the death of Brazilian hero took away the opportunity for us to see two of the all-time greats from different generations battle for the championship. Schumacher had beaten Senna twice prior to his accident and a classic season seemed to be in store.
Michael Schumacher, Benneton B195. German Grand Prix 1995
took the challenge to the German and only a suspect move made by Schumacher at the last race in prevented the British man from becoming champion.
Schumacher won instead and became the first German champion, aged 25. was a far smoother season for Michael. He dominated the championship and won nine races in the process to comfortably defend his title.
Schumacher took the sport to another level. Just as , , and Senna had before, Schumacher’s performances were on another level and it was up to the rest to catch up.
His intensity and levels of fitness were unrivalled. Even at the end of his career in 2012, at the age of 43, few were fitter. It had such an effect that today it is a requirement for all drivers to be as fit. But Schumacher was ahead of the times.
In the winter of 1995, a deal was done that would shape Formula 1 forever. A labouring giant called in need of a star driver to drag them back to the top of the sport. It became official quickly. Schumacher signed for .
The Italian outfit were in disarray having not won a title in 17 years. For their legendary fans, the tifosi, this was not acceptable and Schumacher was tasked with the role of turning them successful again.
1996 brought three race wins and a creditable third in the championship. Not bad on the face of it, but the reality showed that they were a long way behind the dominant . Schumacher was driving superbly though, as his wins in and in front of Ferrari fans proved. Ferrari weren’t a huge threat yet, but the paddock knew it was a matter of time.
Michael Schumacher Ferrari 412T 1st test (1995)
was far better. The Williams of battled with Schumacher in a great title fight despite Michael being in an inferior car. Ferrari had their mojo back as they fought at the front of the grid. However, they say that all great champions have a sly streak.
Schumacher, for as great as he was, did things that didn’t make him too popular. In the last race of the season at , with the title on the line, Schumacher tried to ram Villeneuve off the road. The impact damaged the Ferrari more than the Williams. Schumacher was forced to retire, disgraced.
Williams tailed off in 1998 and was replaced by a revitalised . sat at the wheel. Cool and fast, he was the driver Schumacher picked as his biggest rival. In they had a titanic battle. Schumacher thrilled the crowds, Mika was efficient. It came down to the last race in .
Schumacher had the chance to become a Ferrari champion. With the result in his hands, he failed. His stall on the start line cost him the championship. Hakkinen romped home.
After the major disappointments of the previous two years and the broken leg that cut short his season, it looked like it would never happen for the German and Ferrari. Fate was intervening. At the turn of the century, Ferrari produced another competitive car and Schumacher went to battle with the, now, double-champion Hakkinen.
Schumacher on the podium in Japan (2001)
The championship pendulum swung each race. Schumacher dominated at the beginning but the Finn came roaring back. Their battle at is legendary as Hakkinen drove the race of his life and produced one of the sport's greatest overtakes ever. When it looked like Hakkinen would go to a third straight title Ferrari was falling away.
But the pain of the last four years inspired Schumacher. He took it to another all-or-nothing penultimate race in . Schumacher and Hakkinen sped round at an unbelievable rate, approximately 1.5 seconds a lap faster than their team-mates. This time the outcome was different. Schumacher won the battle, the race and the championship. It was his greatest moment.
Through 2001 to 2004 Schumacher won a combined 39 races and was rarely troubled as he won four back to back championships, eclipsing Fangio’s record. He stood alone as the most successful ever. Formula 1 was a procession in those days, but the admiration of Ferrari’s and Schumacher’s achievements was felt around the world.
But brought a poor car and a single victory, in the notorious where only six cars competed. But a return to form in , at the age of 37, almost merited the eighth title in his supposed final season. had fortune on his side as he claimed the championship as Michael slid into a three-year exile.
M. Schumacher Mercedes W03 at Monaco
At age 40 he decided to make a comeback, he just couldn't leave the sport alone. Sadly the special pace was no longer there, competitive he was, but successful he was not. Finally, in 2012 he said his goodbye.
In December 2013, while skiing off-piste in the French Alps, . He was lucky to survive the impact. He was rushed to the hospital and put into a medically induced coma for six months.
He survived, just. But his fight back will be long. This is the biggest fight of his life and one many wouldn’t be able to win. But Schumacher is no ordinary man. He is determined, relentless, gutsy and a winner.
Keep fighting Michael.
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