The 2019 Festival of Speed presented by Mastercard will delight in a celebration of the incredible career of seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher, as friends, family and rivals come together to pay tribute to Formula 1's greatest record-breaker.
This year marks not only 25 years since the great German clinched his first F1 title (at Adelaide in 1994) but also Michael Schumacher's 50th birthday. Therfore to celebrate these milestones Goodwood will organise a special tribute to the Benneton, Ferrari, Jordan and Mercedes legend.
The celebration will span his entire career, expanding out from his incredible time in Formula 1 to his early years in sportscars and touring cars, and even back into the early days of his career in junuor catagories. As part of the celebration, Damon HIll will take to the hillclimb in one of his former rivals iconic cars.
With this year's theme set as "Speed Kings – Motorsport's Record Breakers" Michael's incredible career is the perfect subject for a tribute. Not only did he race in over 300 Grands Prix on his way to the record of seven World Championships, but on the way Schumacher also broke records for most wins (91), most wins with the same team (72), most wins in a season (13), most podiums (155), most fastest laps (77) and more.
Sabine Kehm, spokesperson for the Schumacher family, said: “We are delighted that the Goodwood Festival of Speed has chosen to celebrate Michael’s career, in the year of his 50th birthday, and on the 25th anniversary of his first World Championship. It is especially fitting this year, as the event’s ‘Record Breakers’ theme perfectly encapsulates his incredible achievements, including records, many of which may never be broken. We hope the public enjoy the opportunity to see an assortment of his winning cars, and the many friends, rivals and team members, who are coming to Goodwood to support the occasion. We thank the Duke of Richmond and the Goodwood team for making Michael such an important feature of this year’s event.”
Schumacher started his motorsport career in karts and, after several titles, moved into Formula 3 and then sports cars with Mercedes-Benz. His Grand Prix debut came in the 1991 Belgian Grand Prix, when he stood in for Jordan’s Bertrand Gachot. His long-time manager Willi Weber was asked by Team Principal Eddie Jordan whether he had been to Spa, to which the answer was ‘yes’. Weber neglected to say that it was as a spectator.
No matter, Schumacher put his Jordan 191 seventh on the grid, the highest starting position for the team to date, and over half a second faster than seasoned team-mate Andrea de Cesaris. While his clutch went on the first lap, the stage had been set. He was signed by Benetton for the rest of the season and, only three years later, he would seal his first world championship.
By the time he moved to Ferrari for the 1996 season he was a two-time champion and, with the help of Jean Todt and Ross Brawn, dragged the Italian team back to the front of the grid. In 2000, he became Ferrari’s first Drivers’ Champion since Jody Scheckter 21 years earlier.
The wins, and championships, kept coming and, having won 91 Grands Prix, he retired at the end of the 2006 season. He returned in 2010 for Mercedes, but despite a podium finish in 2012, he didn’t manage the heights of his first career. While his time in F1 was sometimes overshadowed by poor on-track decisions, his thirst for victory and supreme car control was never in doubt. He still holds over 20 records in the sport, some of which may never be beaten.
In late 2013, Schumacher suffered a severe head injury while skiing, and has been rehabilitating since at his home in Switzerland. His son Mick has shown huge promise in the lower categories of the sport, having won last year’s European Formula 3 Championship and looks ahead to his F1 test debut this weekend in Bahrain.
Photography courtesy of Motorsport Images.
FOS
FOS 2019
Michael Schumacher
Damon Hill
Mika Häkkinen
F1