The Belgian Grand Prix, Spa-Francorchamps, 29th
August 2004. Sitting second on the grid Michael Schumacher must have been thinking another win
would come his way, after all he’d spent the previous five months almost
winning everything; 12 wins from 13 races. Surely he’d wrap up his inevitable
seventh title in victorious style.
It wasn’t to be, although it would have been so
appropriate to claim his last title at the track which was always so
intertwined with his career; his debut for Jordan in 1991, his first win a year
later, a controversial disqualification, the defeat of Damon Hill on a wet
track while on dry tyres, several classic strolls into the distance and another
mesmeric destruction of the field in the rain.
Spa did give him the title, he finished second to Kimi
Raikkonen after slipping back at the start, but after having won the title so
many times, I guess in a year of supremacy the only way you’d want to clinch
the championship is in style, and second wasn’t the style he was accustomed to.
Schumacher dominated the sport for so long it seems
incredible that today marks ten years ago that he wrapped up his final and
seventh world championship. Even now for those who have only a peripheral
knowledge of the world of Formula 1 he is the name that is conjured up. So
complete was his hold on the sport that many people thought he was still out there
winning.
Perhaps that is because he so embodied everything about the
world of Formula 1, its good and its bad points. He took it to a whole new
level of professionalism and brought or established new things which many would
now consider essential tools in the driver trade.
His absolute dedication to his fitness, his ability to
motivate and be a full part of the team driving them in a positive direction,
his constant search for perfection, being one of the first drivers who would
twist and turn various instruments during the race which is now common place.
Schumacher was a class apart, his commitment to his goals
was unmatched. Nothing was left unturned in his pursuit to be the best out
there. Many people at the time became dissatisfied with his constant glory but
I thought it was great to be watching a legend do his work right before us. His
seven titles (1994, 95 & 2000-2004) and 91 wins could well be matched but it’s going to take someone
of complete single minded determination to maintain a win rate such as Schuey
had.
The alarming thing is he could well have won a lot more. The
titles he missed out on could be said to be even better than some of the
championships he took. To my mind at least his 1997 season was majestic. For a
modern day comparison think of Fernando Alonso taking the championship to the
wire in 2012 except that in ’97 the Ferrari was even more of a dog of a car.
He lead the points into the final race but obviously to the
greater world his year was tarnished when faced with the possibility of losing
to a car and driver which should have had the title sewn up several races ago
if it weren’t for the efforts of Schumacher he swiped into the side of the
Williams of Jacques Villeneuve.
A bad ending and one of his professional fouls which he
actually admitted to, but to me it takes nothing away from the fact that he had
no real right to be challenging for the title that year anyway. The following
season he was up against the equally superior McLaren of Mika Hakkinen as the
Williams had been before. Again he managed to take the title to the final race.
Finally, while leading the 2006 Japanese Grand Prix ahead of Alonso he was just
17 laps away from taking a two point lead into the final race of the year when
his engine failed. His luck which had always been so good was finally deserting
him as his first career came to a close.
Of course it possibly should have continued at Ferrari for
another year or two. For reasons which remain unclear Kimi was signed without Schumacher’s
knowledge and he was ushered into a retirement he wasn’t really ready for. Can
we speculate what might have happened? Well you can never be sure, but I’m
pretty sure nevertheless. 2007 wouldn’t have been the three way classic between
Kimi, Alonso and Lewis Hamilton. It would have been a final Schuey title.
The way those three capitulated and the fact Kimi and Felipe Massa
were so evenly matched when Schumacher had mostly had the beating of Massa
pretty comprehensively leads me to believe he’d have used the 2007 Ferrari to
devastating effect. It certainly would have been interesting to witness the
following year, Hamilton against Schumacher in equally matched cars. It's a missing highlight just like the lack of a proper full title fight between Schumacher and Ayrton Senna, it's added to the long list of what could have beens.
We caught a glimpse of how good it might have been in the
2011 Italian Grand Prix with an epic dual between Hamilton and Schumacher which
was an utter joy and also beautifully aggressive. Because of course Schuey did
retire at the end of 2006 before coming back in a blaze of glory in 2010 for
Mercedes.
It didn’t work out quite as well as had been hoped, the luck I mentioned earlier was practically non-existant this time around. Despite
Mercedes spawning from the ashes of 2009 championship winners Brawn GP, the car
wasn’t up to it. In fact the car, the tyres, the competition had all moved on.
Schumacher was also faced with ageing, even he couldn’t hold back time. There
were stupid accidents, moments of indecision and several poor races. But there
were highs too, that battle with Hamilton, fourth in Canada 2011, the pole lap
of the season in Monaco 2012, his podium in Valencia and a comeback charge from
the back to seventh in his final final race.
He said later his Mercedes comeback taught him how to lose,
but you could see that mostly he was still enjoying it, I think gone was the
total commitment to winning, he still wanted to certainly and some of his on
track manoeuvres proved that, but he was a more relaxed individual in the public
eye and seemed happy enough to be racing and working towards something.
The rewards never came but as we’ve come to appreciate, his
comparison to Nico Rosberg is nothing at all to be ashamed of as Nico matches
Hamilton in this years championship. Schumacher was often faster on race pace,
so despite not demonstrating the devastating winning habit that characterised
his first career it wasn’t quite as bad as some make out and when analysed
properly doesn’t take anything away from his legacy.
Not only is it ten years since his last title but later on
this year it will be twenty since his first title. No one else has managed to
sustain such comprehensive success to stay at the top of the sport for season
after season, he will forever be talked about amongst the greats.
Of course there were the controversial moments, including
questionable driving methods, favouritism from his team and the sports
governing bodies. With regards to the team favouritism, he worked himself into
that position so why should he not have benefitted? But these controversies are
not what should be remembered about his career.
It should be just how exceptional he was, how much of a
racer he was and how much he loved the sport he dominated. I remember the first
time I saw him win live at the 1998 British Grand Prix in the pouring rain
which encapsulated his career for me as it showed the racer and the controversy.
It was mesmeric watching his hands dancing on the steering wheel as you could
see him delicately balancing the car coming through club, driving hard through
the spray but to win in the pit lane created uproar at the time.
You always knew something would happen when Michael
Schumacher was racing. Since he retired for the second time he was still
looking for challenges, looking for fun and thrills while also helping extensively with charities which wasn't overly publicised. I truly hope he can make
as good a recovery as possible from the horrible skiing accident at the end of
last year that left him in a coma for nearly six months. So now is the time to
remember his success and continue to wish him well for more success in the
future. Keep fighting Michael.
all photo's taken from autosport.com
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