With two rounds to go in the 2020 Formula 2 campaign, Mick Schumacher heads the standings by 22 points, while the son of seven-time F1 champion Michael is hotly-tipped to bring his famous family name back to the top level of motor sport in 2021. But as the 21-year-old reveals, if getting to Formula 1 is going to happen, he wants it to happen on his terms…
“If I’m not racing, I am thinking about racing,” says Mick Schumacher midway through our deep-dive into his career to date.
He is calm and relaxed when he talks, sat in full Ferrari gear, including the baseball cap and now mandatory mask. He’s currently in the best form of his F2 career, leading the championship with 191 points to fellow Ferrari Driver Academy member Callum Ilott’s 169, and seemingly on the cusp of making the step up to Formula 1. “My dream is F1,” he adds, “my dream is motorsport, and therefore, I am always thinking about it and always dreaming about it.”
But while the dual pressures of racing at this level, combined with those that come with having such a famous surname, are undoubtedly present in Schumacher, the smiley 21-year-old is certainly good at hiding them.
Schumacher’s been faced with this attention from the very first time he raced in go-karts to the moment he first set foot in the Formula 2 paddock in Bahrain, where he was greeted by an ocean of reporters and journalists jostling to speak to him at the back of the PREMA garage. It’s the reason why he initially chose to race under the pseudonyms of Betsch – his mother’s maiden name – and Junior, back in karting.
“We tried to keep it on the less noticeable side as long as possible,” he explains. “Trying to have as much freedom for myself as possible. It gave me the opportunity to grow on my own and to understand how to be a normal kid and a normal racing kid.
“Coming to formula racing, we knew that there was going to be more attention. I wanted to race under my full name anyway and I am proud to have it on my car, I am proud to have it on my suits. The media have always been around me a bit more than others, but we’ve always been quite respected in that area, in terms of, if I ask for the privacy I need, then they give it to me and I’m very grateful for that.” – the Ferrari Driver Academy member concluded.
Show your support for Scuderia Ferrari with official merchandise collection! Click here to enter the F1 online Store and shop securely! And also get your F1 tickets for every race with VIP hospitality and unparalleled insider access. Click here for the best offers to support Charles and Lewis from the track!
Stepping up to Formula 2
Schumacher’s rise through the ranks has been more steady than rapid – and that’s by design. The German’s goal of reaching F1 has always been very much long-term, and there were to be no shortcuts – he wanted to arrive ready. Finishing second in both German and Italian Formula 4 in 2016, he went on to clinch the European F3 title in 2018, in his second season at that level.
Then came the step up to F2 and the re-introduction of the Schumacher name to a Grand Prix weekend. This was the biggest challenge of his fledgling career, and he openly admits that the initial adaptation period “took a bit longer than I thought it would”.
“The Hankook tyres used in European F3 were more durable,” he explains. “I was coming onto a Pirelli tyre in F2 that degrades a lot, so you have to change your driving style. There is also the turbo, and the fact the cars are a lot heavier and a lot more powerful.”
The jump between categories was massive, and not purely due to the change in tyre. From the outside, there was a certain expectation placed upon him, partly because of that name, and partly because the previous two champions, Charles Leclerc and George Russell, had both won the category at the first attempt – an important distinction being that they had risen from GP3, which used the same Pirelli tyres as F2.
2019 was also stacked with experienced talent, the eventual top four made up of drivers with at least two years’ experience under their belts. For this reason, Schumacher insists that 2019 – which saw him finish 12th in the standings – was always intended as an acclimatisation year.
“Everything is a learning curve,” he says. “If you take the time to go into detail, if you take the time to learn things right, in the long-term it will work out better than if you try and rush things.
“In the long-term, what I want to do is to create the perfect racing driver and become the complete racing driver. That’s why last year was so important, trying to understand every single bit of detail before thinking of the results.
“I don’t want to talk about luck, but in ways, last year was a very unlucky season – we had a few reliability issues and some contact which was unfortunate, but I think that we always showed good pace, which is what mattered to us. Ultimately, I want to go to F1 being as best prepared as I can be and to do so, I have to also go through tough times, because during those, you learn the most.”
Leave a Reply