Posts Tagged ‘schumacher’

The end of an era…

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

(Originally posted 7/10/2006)

As some of you readers (yes, all both of you), may know, I am an avid F1 fan, and have been so since about 1993. Never missed a race since then, not even the “OMG I have to get up at 3am to watch this” races. And always, I have supported one man.

Yes, Michael Schumacher was the man for me, even in the days when he looked like he was only 12 years old, and Senna was the man to beat.

Now, 13 years later, he has won just about everything there is to win any F1 race. 7 World Championships (which could become 8 if there’s a God), countless race wins, fastest laps, pole positions, you name it.

But of course there were many people around that disliked him very much so. Because of his arrogance. Because of the way he just magnetically attracted himself to his nearest Championship contender when things went down to the wire. Because he won everything and it’s just too easy to be rooting for the guy who always beats everyone hands down. In 2002 the season got so ridiculous, he had the championship in the bag with half the races still to go. And to top it off, he finished inside the points for every single race that year, which is also a record. It wasn’t a good time for fans of other drivers.

For me , MS has always been the constant factor in F1. Sure, the rules changed, we now have stupid grooved tyres, and traction control back on the cars, but there was still one man who was doing what he does best.

I even supported him through the “rough patch”, in 96 and 97, when he had the crappiest car around and basically just drove around trying to get the car home. The way he turned that team around to what it is today is truly remarkable. The people at Ferrari were apparently so happy about it, that he had a contract that could be extended indefinately.

But I think the time has come now for some new names. There are many big young names out to blitz the world with their talent. First and foremost, we have Fernando Alonso, who pretty much did to Renault what Schumacher did to Ferrari, ie turn a crapbucket of a car and team into an unbeatable, and reliable combination. Then there’s Raikkonen, who’s shown he can drive a car, but hasn’t had the best of luck with cars (particulatly engines). And there are new names added every year that Impress me. Kubica…guy from Poland, never been in an F1 car before 2005 and was on the podium the other week. Vettel, apparently “chosen” for F1 by the same guy that hand picked Schumacher all those years ago.
First time out in an F1 car, and sets the best free practice lap of all of the drivers.

Yet still, none of those names stirs up the same emotion for me. Atleast not yet. I now have some driver that I kinda like (Massa, Rosberg, Kubica), several that I really like (Webber, Raikkonen, Sato, Fisichella) and one I really dislike (Alonso). But things can and must change for the future.

However. Schumacher is a name that gets a reaction from almost anyone. A quite strong reaction from most, in the way of “Stupid bastard”. But like him or dislike him, he has changed the scenery of F1 in the last years, and I for one will miss him when he’s gone. I already look forward to referring to “the good old days, when MS was still racing”.

Many people will be happy he is leaving the sport. To those people I ask : Who will you be hating for the seasons to come? Because there isn’t any driver with a particularly interesting personality anymore. They all are so PC, almost little robots (Raikkonen fits this profile best), saying what the team wants them to say, drives the car as good as they can, and basically keeping thier pie-hole shut for the remainder of time.

When Schumacher was about to win 5 Driver’s Championships, there was a lot of talk about him being “the best ever”. Since nobody had equalled Fangio’s record. And when he did, he still wasn’t “the best ever”, because he was “just as good as Fangio”. So he won again, and still people wouldn’t give him the credit he deserves. I would hear things like “The cars Fangio drove were much more difficult to drive” or “Its a computer with an engine, whoever has the best car wins, it has nothing to do with the driver anymore”.

So then he won the championship for the 7th time, and just about then everyone shut up, because there were no more excuses. He was, and is, the best there ever was.

So my only wish is this, that Schumacher can leave the sport the best way he can. And what better way to do so than to win the Championship. From the start of the season, it looked like (even if his car was better than in 05, which it is) it would be near impossible for MS to win this season. Renault were just too good. But slowly, gradually, the gap Alonso – Schumacher got smaller. And just last week, MS tied them. So it’s really down to these last few races to determine the winner.

Next year will be totally different, and not only because one big name is missing. The other 2 big names will be shuffeled around, as one Spaniard is driving the Silver Arrows next year, and an ice-cool Finn will be racing a fiery red Ferrari. It’ll still be the best sport there ever was. It’ll no doubt be exciting. But some part of F1 will be gone forever, and it will never be the same again…

*cries in beer*

So here’s some little pictures from stuff I want to see repeated tomorrow morning. Make it happen, Michael!


If anyone cares, here is a Wikipedia page containing all info.
Just for fun, I’ll post all of his records here :

Most championship titles: 7
Most consecutive championship titles: 5
Most race wins: 91
Most consecutive race wins: 7 (in 2004 – European GP, Canadian GP, United States GP, French GP, British GP, German GP, Hungarian GP) This record is shared with Ascari, who won the last 6 races of 1952 and the first one of 1953. The following race was the Indianapolis 500, in which he did not participate. Afterwards he won other two races, but since the Indy 500 was officially part of the F1 World Championship, his winning streak was already over.
Most race wins with one team: 72 with Ferrari
Most race wins at the same GP: 8 at the French Grand Prix (Magny-Cours)
GPs won in most different countries: 20
Most time between first and last race wins: 14 years,1 month and 2 days
Most second place finishes: 43
Most podium finishes: 154
Most consecutive podium finishes: 19 (from the 2001 United States Grand Prix, until the 2002 Japanese Grand Prix)
Most points finishes: 189
Most laps leading: 4970 (with a total of 23,464 km in 136 Grands Prix)
Most pole positions: 68
Most consecutive pole postitions: 7 (tied with Alain Prost)
Most starts from first row: 108
Most fastest laps: 75
Most doubles (pole position and race win): 40
Most hat-trick (pole position, race win and fastest lap): 22
Most championship points: 1,364
Most consecutive race finished without retirement: 24 (from the 2001 Hungarian Grand Prix, until the 2003 Malaysian Grand Prix)
Most race wins in a season: 13 (out of 18 races)
Most fastest laps in a season: 10 (out of 18 races; tied by Raikkanen in 2005)
Most championship points in a season: 148 (out of a maximum of 180) 2002
Most podium finishes in a season: 17 (out of 17 races) 1995

Only racing driver ever, in any racing class, to win 5 times at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Only racing driver ever, in any racing class, to win 5 times at Autodromo Nazionale Monza

Youngest double World Champion

Love him or hate him …

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

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You can’t ignore him.

How sweet it is

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006

Schumacher wins 2006 San Marino Grand Prix

After almost 18 months (since the Japanese GP 2004) Michael Schumacher finally won a race. I know he won the United States Grand Prix last year but that hardly counts.

The last two seasons have been difficult years for Ferrari as they’ve seen their dominance of Foruma One slide to the point where they struggle to finish races in the top 8. The first races of this season showed an improvement over last years performance but that improvement hasn’t translated to any race wins or dominating performances. But the fourth round brought us into the heart of Tifosi country. Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrai at Imola might not be the home of the national Grand Prix of Italy but there is no mistaking that it is Ferrari’s home race.

Last year Schumacher and Alonso thrilled everyone with a final 12 laps or so which saw Schumacher pressing hard to overtake a slower but determined Alonso. Alonso won that race but this year in a copy of last years excitement, albeit for many more laps, Schumacher was able to hold of Alonso to win the San Marino Grand Prix and give the Tifosi reason to cheer for the first time in a long time. Schumacher looked like he was running away with the race in the first stint. He secured pole position the previous day, breaking Ayrton Senna’s pole record in the process, and got a good start on Sunday to lead Jenson Button through the first few laps. Everything looked good for Ferrari’s fans until the first pit stop. Schumacher was forced to use some worn tires which seemed to be graining and causing him to lap slower and slower until it was obvious that Alonso, in second place at that time, was going to catch him. Well the old saying in F1 is that ‘catching someone is one thing, passing them is another thing entirely’. To the delight of the home town crowd that old saying proved true as Schumacher went on to hold of the charging Alonso through the second stint as well as the third stint which he ran on different tires but with the same slow results. In the closing laps of the race Alonso looked like he didn’t want to settle for second and fought hard. He made a mistake with 3 laps to go which gave Schumacher the breathing room he needed to enjoy his first meaningful win in 18 months as he crossed the finish line.

I don’t usually post race reviews, readers can visit any number of websites to get a race summary but this win was special. Schumacher showed his greatest talent isn’t in driving a car fast, he showed he can win when his car is slower than the guy behind him. He showed amazing racecraft managing those two slow stints without giving up the lead. He didn’t put a wheel wrong and soaked up all the pressure from Alonso without cracking. The most compelling fact is that on his in-lap for his second tire change he put in a lap which was 1.5 seconds faster than the average of his previous 10 laps. Think about that. He was obviously having a problem with his car, he just saw Alonso go into the pits and he decided he needed to get everything he could out of the car so he put in a blistering in-lap just before pitting himself. When he came out of the pits he was still in the lead and the race was his to lose.

I’ve been thinking about that in-lap a lot trying to figure out if he was sandbagging or had some other tactic but none of it makes sense considering that any tactic which puts Fernando Alonso nipping at your heals for 30 laps is a bad tactic. The only conclusion I could draw is that since the first pitstop he sensed he had lost some speed so he decided to just drive fast enough to hold off Alonso and keep something in reserve for when he really needed it – such as an in-lap. I think many other drivers would simply put their left foot down and go as fast as the car would let them but Schumacher’s experience and racecraft gave him the confidence to drive the car at or below its limit knowing that passing at Imola is impossible and he gave himself a chance to win the race when the opportunity presented itself. Basically he pulled of the equivalent of a Formula One rope-a-dope!

Discuss on the message board or make a comment below …

37 Years on …

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2006

Today is Michael Schumacher’s birthday. He will be the oldest driver on the starting grid this coming season and you can hardly say that last season is allowing him any thoughts of his career fading gloriously into its twilight. He is optimistic for the 2006 season but he has a track record that allows him optimism. Not to say he is resting on his laurels as I understand this year for the first time in a long time Herr Schumacher has decided to perform testing before his Christmas holidays. Obviously he is not leaving anything to chance; as he feels his age catching up to him he wants to make sure his potentially final season in F1 will have every chance of securing his eighth world championship.

Only 3 drivers in recent history have won a championship past their 37th birthday with Nigel Mansell winning the prize in 1992 at the age of 39. It won’t be easy and the young guns of F1 have shown they are willing and most importantly able to take the sport for themselves. Fernando Alonso has stamped his name on the sport and Kimi Raikkonen is the champion in waiting.

It’s not just the ticking of time that makes this coming season seemingly critical for Schumacher. This could very well be the last year he can drive for Ferrari. Schumacher has said previously that’ll he’ll never drive for another team and the team has said whether he wants to stay or retire is completely up to him despite his contract expiring at the end of 2006. These words seem sacrilege but there might not be room for him at Ferrari. Alonso signing with McLaren and the worst kept secret in F1; Raikkonen joining Ferrari in 2007 with his contract expiring with McLaren at the end of 2006, seems to leave no seat for the seven time champ at Ferrari. Sure Massa’s contract is only for one year but can we dare to dream of a Raikkonen/Schumacher teaming at the Scuderia? I want to believe! But it’s highly unlikely Ferrari can afford it either in the pocket book or for the sake of the team. If Ferrari decide to go that route maybe they should talk to Ron Dennis and ask him how things were in the team garage during 1988 with Prost and Senna as team-mates. Sure the team won 15 of 16 races that year but from all accounts the tension and animosity between the superstar drivers was at times untenable.

Happy birthday to the old man and if nothing else I’m just happy to see him race in his twilight so he can either go out with a roar or pass the torch to the next generation. We were robbed of that with Senna’s untimely death and win or loss, old or young, we the F1 fans deserve to witness the birth of a new era in the next (few) years.

Road to the Title

Monday, September 26th, 2005

With everyone talking about how the baton has been passed from Senna to Schumacher to Alonso, it might be interesting to look at how each made his way to his first title.

Senna joined F1 in 1984 with the uncompetitive Toleman team, but immediately impressed with his pace and car control. He progressed to Lotus in 1985, then to McLaren in 1988, where he clinched the title at the age of 28. At the time he clinched the title, on his 79th race, he had 14 wins to his name. Senna will probably always be a legend of qualifying, so it is no surprise that he dominated his teammates early in his career. How his qualifying/scoring dominance went during those 79 races:

1984 (v Cecotto): qual 8-2; pts 9-0
(v Johansson): qual 2-0; pts 4-3
1985 (v deAngelis): qual 13-3; pts 38-33
1986 (v Dumfries): qual 16-0; pts 55-3
1987 (v Nakajima): qual 16-0; pts 57-7
1988 (v Prost): qual 14-2; pts 90-87

Michael Schumacher also impressed with his pace from his first moment in an F1 car. He had only a single race for Jordan, at Spa 1991, before being snapped up by Benetton, where he stayed until he won the title in 1994. At the time he clinched the title, he was 25 years old, and had won 10 of the 52 races he had entered. Michael will always be known as a better race driver than qualifier, but his sheer pace ensured that he almost always out-qualified his teammates:

1991 (v. deCesaris): qual 1-0; pts 0-0
(v. Piquet): qual 4-1; pts 4-3.5
1992 (v. Brundle): qual 16-0; pts 53-38
1993 (v. Patrese): qual 16-0; pts 52-20
1994 (v. Verstappen): qual 8-0; pts 50-8
(v. Lehto): qual 4-0; pts 36-1
(v. Herbert): qual 2-0; pts 6-0

Fernando Alonso’s claim to fame has always been his youth. He was the youngest driver to win an F3000 race, the youngest to be on an F1 podium, the youngest at everything. And now he is the youngest F1 champion, having clinched the title at the age of 24, on his 68th race, with 7 career victories. He, like several other exciting young drivers, got his start with Minardi, in 2001. After sitting out 2002, he moved to Renault for 2003, where he has stayed. Alonso has never been thought of as the absolute quickest driver in F1, but he has shown the ability to pick up championship points by the bunch. Even when he doesn’t out-qualify his teammate, he is likely to finish ahead. His qualifying statistics aren’t quite as impressive as Senna’s or Schumacher’s, but that is primarily due to being paired with a qualifying demon like Trulli for two years:

2001 (v Marques): qual 12-2; pts 0-0
(v Yoong): qual 3-0; pts 0-0
2003 (v Trulli): qual 8-8; pts 55-33
2004 (v Trulli): qual 8-9; pts 59-46
2005 (v Fisichella): qual 13-4; pts 117-45

There isn’t much point in using these statistics to compare these three drivers to each other, because the circumstances are different, the times are different, the teammates are different, the opposition is different, etc. But there is a definite pattern that is in stark contrast to virtually every other driver: each of these three immediately made his mark on joining F1, and progressed steadily to the championship. Notice that, while on his way to his first title, not once was one of these three out-scored by a teammate over a season. Many other drivers have legions of fans who will swear that their favourite driver would win the title under the same circumstances, but it never happens. These top drivers fight their way into a top car, and then waste no time taking home the title. Each of them won the title the first time his car was close to good enough.

Maybe this season will be the only championship Alonso wins in his entire career. Maybe in a few years we’ll be talking about how Kimi finally started winning titles in 2006 and never looked back. But Alonso has earned respect. He wasn’t dropped into the best car on the grid; he worked his way to the front by making sure he was never beaten by a teammate.