Business / Auto Global

Schumacher, a blend of greatness and daring

By Agence France-Presse in Paris (China Daily) Updated: 2014-01-03 07:44

After his seventh place in Sao Paulo for his 308th and final Grand Prix, 'Schumi' had for a time considered a switch to another type of horse power: rodeo.

"My wife, Corinna, has already chosen the horse, I'm ready," Schumacher said after his second retirement, the first being between 2007 and 2009.

Not rodeo, however, but an ambassadorial role for Mercedes on road safety projects. A surprising choice for a man who was never able to do things slowly.

After years of racing in the high-risk world of Formula One, his skiing accident suggests retirement had not dulled his relish of dangerous pursuits.

Holder of a pilot's license, an accomplished motorbike rider, parachutist, skier and mountain climber, the young retiree had not lost his love of risk-taking, turning his back on the career of television pundit embraced by many of his former rivals.

Schumacher, a blend of greatness and daring

He already survived a motorbike accident in Spain in 2009, suffering head and neck injuries, but that time he was released from hospital after just five hours.

As an F1 racer Schumacher was known for his daring overtaking maneuvers and an almost reckless abandon in the pursuit of victory.

When he won his first world title in 1994 with Benetton, he did so in controversial fashion, crashing into his title rival Damon Hill in the final race in Adelaide, Australia, after he had already dashed his own hopes by careening off the track when pushing hard - despite holding a comfortable lead.

He almost provoked a similar crash in the final race of the 1997 season when battling Canada's Jacques Villeneuve for the title, an incident for which he was disqualified from the whole season.

Schumacher's career was also punctuated by accusations of dangerous driving following incidents such as a near collision with former teammate Rubens Barrichello in 2010, which the Brazilian described as "the most dangerous thing" he had been through.

Schumacher retired at the end of the 2006 season before making an unsuccessful comeback in 2010 with Mercedes.

His duels with Hill, Villeneuve and Mika Hakkinen, fired by an unquenchable competitive spirit, have gone down in Formula One folklore.

Born on Jan 3, 1969, near Cologne, Germany, his father was a bricklayer who also ran the local go-kart track where Michael was first bitten by the racing bug.

By 1987, Schumacher was the German and European go-kart champion and had left school to work as an apprentice mechanic, although he was soon racing professionally.

In 1990 he won the German F3 championship and was hired by Mercedes to drive sports cars.

Just a year later he burst onto the Formula One scene, qualifying seventh for Jordan in his debut race at Belgium.

The young German was immediately snapped up by Benetton, where he won his first Formula One race in 1992, again at Belgium's tough Spa-Francorchamps circuit.

Schumacher won 18 races over the next four seasons with Benetton, claiming back-to-back world titles in 1994 and 1995.

In 2002 Schumacher won 11 times and finished on the podium in all 17 races.

In 2003, he broke Argentine Juan Manuel Fangio's record by claiming his sixth world title and in 2004 he won 13 races, his greatest season.

He was also given the title of 'Rain King' because he was at his best in the most challenging conditions - winning 17 of 30 career races on rain-soaked tracks.

Married to Corinna since 1995 with two children - Gina-Maria, 16, and Mick - Schumacher retired for good in 2012, but his love for speed and danger never left him.

The irony is that after a life spent negotiating potentially fatal turns, his only serious injury was breaking his left leg in 1999.

Schumacher told German television in 2009 about his accident at Silverstone on July 11, 1999, when he drove into a wall of tires and broke his leg.

"I lie there and think about how I can start to feel my heartbeat again," he said.

"And I feel how it gets less and less and then completely stops. Lights go out.

"And then I think this is how it must feel when you are on your way up."

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