The Beginning of the End?

by Craig Normansell with others, on May 11th, 2011

The Scrutineering Bay is Badger's way of taking a hot Grand Prix racing topic and getting people from the Sett involved to put their opinions across. From predicting races, arguing stewards decisions to just deciding who was/is/will be the best, anything is fair game!

Michael Schumacher has divided fans across the sport for a long, long time, and here in the Sett - especially after his calamitous race on Sunday - he has been quite the area of discussion. Where better to go this week than look over Turkey and ask;

"Will Schuey be in F1 next season?"

The group of Badger's making their points this week will be myself, Craig Normansell, pun-maestro Jimmy Von Weeks and starting the ball rolling, Adam Millenueve:

Michael Schumacher - he's F1's answer to Whacky Races' Dick Dastardly - he's always been up to sneaky tricks and never refuses to giving up.

Putting his incident with Rubens and the wall to one side, he has calmed down a little on the dirty tricks side of the Whacky Races villain analogy lately, but the other trait of said villain was that he'd never give up - ever. In those fantastic cartoons you'd see the villain get it wrong and then get wrong again, but he'd keep coming back and having another go - rather inevitably the episode would end with him being a laughing stock.

Are you following me readers? Fans of the statistically best driver ever, don't get me wrong, I'm not just against him staying on because of the past (Adelaide 94 dammit), but because he's just ruining his once legendary status and the myth that once surrounded him - "Schumacher's behind you" that radio message used to simply scare rookies off the track, whereas now everyone is passing him and treating it as a trophy move - it's not fair on Michael, yes it's his own doing that he's back, but he should get out now and start reliving his glory days on Geoff Crammond's Grand Prix games (he was often leading in those!)

Oh and err, my answer is no he won't be in F1 2012, and if it turns out he's still looking silly in 12 months time, I'll write to Dick Dastardly apologising for ever comparing him to Michael Schumacher, because even he wasn't that silly.

Up next is Jimmy:

I believe I'm alone in thinking Schumacher will remain in F1 next year. I don't necessarily think he should stick around, I just happen to reckon he will.

Why? Because if he's having fun (which he largely is, Turkey aside) and the team want him (they do - though not wholly for his driving) then what's stopping him?

His future has been the subject of debate since midway through last season but for the most part the seven-time champion has seemed perfectly happy to stick around as long as Mercedes will have him. Yes, the results have been poor, but as a man who's already achieved more than anyone else in the history of the sport, Schuamcher has little to prove. Speaking about the new-for-2011 rules before Istanbul, Michael made it clear that he's having a blast.

"There is fantastic fighting [during the races]. I was in the middle of that in the last grand prix, I had lots of action and I have to say I enjoyed it big time."

Admittedly this was before the Turkish horror show, after which he told the BBC that "the big joy is not there right now." But if he has a good time in Spain - and that just means enjoying the racing, not necessarily beating Nico - then that will be forgotten

I don’t pretend to know Schumacher and I can't fully put my finger on what it is that motivates him. I don't think it's money - he gives so much to charity and was still making so much from endorsements in retirement that it seems unlikely he'd return chasing more cash.

All I can imagine is that he came back to enjoy racing again, and if he puts Turkey behind him he'll quickly forget any notion of quitting he may have at the moment. Another crack in 2012 would then be a perfectly plausible scenario.

And lastly, it my go:

I made this abundantly clear when the Scrutineering Bay previewed MSC’s season, and I’ll make it clear again now; I am not a fan of the man. It probably started after Adelaide ’94 and was exasperated between the years of 2000 and 2005. But, that’s another article entirely.

It’s kind of bittersweet to see the greatest driver in history – statistically – meander round tracks, occasionally bumping to drivers or running them off the road. In Turkey, thanks to his dubious defensive tactics, we got to see both. If there was ever a shell of a former legend, it was sat in a Mercedes on Sunday afternoon. It’s almost like karma has come back to haunt Michael. Again, maybe that’s another Badger piece for another day.

Sod’s law says he’ll turn it around within the next few races though. The Silver Arrow has pace, Rosberg is showing that, what odds are that the Silver Baron finds it when everyone least suspects it? Slightly less than previous years I’d bet, but possible none the less. And if that happens then what harm would one more crack in 2012 bring? I hope it doesn’t happen but ultimately I’m just not that lucky!

Lots of strong opinions from all the Badgers involved there, but what do you think about where Michael Schumacher will be next season? Could it be on the track of off it? Feel free to add your slice of banter and let us know!

Comments and Discussion

Alexis

I think he'll stay because he's bloody minded. And Mercedes won't mind because they've got a fast driver in the other car, and Schumacher is marketing gold. MC is definitely a number 2 driver now, but still probably better than having a rookie in the seat.

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 10:43 am
Len Hutton

I believe the standard of drivers is better now than when he was racing at his peak.He is also now 42 years of age. The next oldest is Barrichello at 38. Rosberg is 25.

He has lost his aura. Would Petrov have had the "audacity" to overtake Schumacher at his peak? Probably not.

Rosberg is comfortably out-qualifying and out-performing him in most races and that has to be the most accurate measure of where he is in the F1 pecking order.

Would Schumacher of old admitted a mistake in the coming together with Petrov? I don't think so.

He has never really been in this position before I think and for him to admit that he is not enjoying the racing is very illuminating. "Weakness" from such a competitive individual speaks volumes.

He will retire gracefully at the end of the season I believe.

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 10:50 am
Bruce Richards

Remind me. Who is Schumacher?

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 10:56 am
Jimmy Von Weeks

Marketing super gold, more golden than Nico's gold-spun hair. The fact is, a lot of people who know zero about F1 know who Michael Schumacher is, not least in Germany. He's still a powerful marketing tool and Merc will be desparate to hang on to that.

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 11:49 am
Willi Gauda

Michael Schumacher, aka Darth Schuvader, is a central character in the
F1 saga, appearing as the chief antagonist in the first five Trilogies
92-06. He also plays a recurring role in the Trilogy
2010-2012. Schumacher is a brilliant driver who fell to the dark side
of the Force, as evidenced by his collisions in the 1994 Australian
Grand Prix as well as in the 1997 European Grand Prix. The Force is
very strong within Schuvader, as demonstrated by his ruthless
dominance in Episodes 2000-2004. The F1 tales also reveal that he has
two heirs: Seb SkyVettel and Princess Nico Rosberg. As of May 2011,
rumours abound that he'll sacrifice himself to save his third and
hitherto hidden heir: the Hulk. Schumacher has had also an impact
outside the racing track, since, despite his affinity with the dark
side of the Force, he has been involved in numerous humanitarian
efforts throughout his life and donated tens of millions of dollars to
charity.

Taken from the Wookiepedia.

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 1:15 pm
Bruce Richards

:-)

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 4:18 pm
TheBrav3

I'm with you jimmy and a rather important piece of info (i feel) is that his best lap in practice 3 was 7 tenths? Faster than his q3 qualy time. Like the man said something went wrong there his setup just stopped working. I don't know but he showed he had the pace to at least start p7 if not higher because u don't normally run your outright qualifying pace in practice 3. Having to pit for a new nose in the first laps just sealed what could have still been an acceptable weekend.

It's worth noting as well that if he had started p7 he would have been ahead of hamilton at the 3rd corner running 4th which he missed out on by a whisker. That could have changed his whole race. Incidently 8th-5th off the line on the dirty side of the grid is still brilliant, he has beaten rosberg on starts hands down since he came back. I think schumacher has generaly been closer if not better than rosberg in almost every session this year except qualifying and that seems to be more down to luck than anything. We have to assume they run similar fuel loads in practice sessions.

For any man not just for a 42 year old i think he's doing ok. and the age is something that is skipped over alot. Take a look at stephen hendry 7x world snooker champion of similar age to michael and with the greatest of respect to stephen he can't keep up with the young guys anymore. Frankly the talks of will he retire wont he are starting to get boring he's here till 2013, if anyone thinks you can judge a driver on one race then you have much to learn about f1. my 2 pence ^^ or more like 2 pounds :P

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 4:19 pm
TheBrav3

I'd just like to say Gauda LOL nice one.

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 4:20 pm
The Badger

If we did 'comment of the day' here on Badger, you'd have with that one Mr Gauda!

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 7:20 pm
Willi Gauda

Thanks! I am glad you guys liked it :) .

- posted on 11th May 2011 at 7:58 pm

Leave a comment

RECENT ARTICLES F1 TV Times - Monaco

F1 TV Times for the Monaco Grand Prix

MONACO-event-2012

Monaco Grand Prix LIVE in London

AU587274

Our Top 5 Monaco Grand Prix

Photo: The Cahier Archive

Graham Hill - The man they called Mister Monaco

b-and-o

WIN: Bang & Olufsen Form 2 Headphones

retrof1

WIN: Classic Monaco Grand Prix Art Prints

goodwood-fos

WIN: Goodwood Festival of Speed Tickets

b-and-o-experience

WIN: Bang & Olufsen F1 Viewing Experience

octane

WIN: F1 2012 'Champions' Poster Prints

120426010801-susie-wolff-williams-f1-horizontal-gallery

Podium or Pits? It's Grand Prix POP!

Pastor was Top Dog, but what about everyone else?

Driver Performance Analysis: Spain

Felipe Massa - 2 points

Massa Bashing: Round 5

The_Three_Stooges

The Spanish Grand Prix Hangover

303344_10151717610735198_574385197_24378349_1708065361_n

The Top 5 from Catalunya

Santander-Grid-Girls

The Best Pictures from Barcelona