How Schumacher’s Driving Style Won 7 F1 Championships

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  • čas přidán 31. 03. 2020
  • Seven world championships and 91 wins over 19 years in Formula One. Michael Schumacher is still one of F1’s most successful drivers, but how did he manage to be so fast over so many seasons?
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    What was it in particular about his driving style that allowed him to dominate Formula One and how did it compare to other drivers such as Ayrton Senna and Lewis Hamilton?
    Michael Schumacher was in Formula One for a very long time. Therefore it would be unfair to say that his driving style remained the same. Throughout the whole period, even in between races, the cars are constantly being upgraded each weekend. That's not to mention that Schumacher also changed between cars each season and also teams like Benetton, Ferrari and Mercedes.
    On top of that Formula One tends to have big regulation changes every three or so years. The very best drivers won't have a static technique.
    There's no one size fits all driving style and they really need to adapt to the changing grip, the changing balance of each individual car, tyre and circuit.
    This adaptation of driving style is a skill in itself. It's actually a lot easier to see differences in driving style from Schumacher's era of the 90s and 2000s than it is today. F1 cars back then were a lot less refined than they are nowadays. That’s what we’re going to take a look at in today’s video.
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @Driver61
    @Driver61  Před 4 lety +350

    What do you think about Schumacher and his driving style?
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    • @guardrailhitter
      @guardrailhitter Před 4 lety +23

      Stupidly aggressive

    • @camamis1552
      @camamis1552 Před 4 lety +28

      He managed to put more people in the wall than any other world champion, Bridgestone and Pirelli also made custom tyres specifically for him.

    • @RBerna
      @RBerna Před 4 lety +31

      Another great video and analysis! Just adding something to how he managed to carry more speed than others, specially in the 90's: I believe he was the first F1 driver to explore the left foot braking, trail braking in slow and medium speed corners and stabilizing the car in the fast bends. In his very first race, Spa 1991, he gained a lot of time at Blanchimont over de Cesaris left foot braking just a little bit to stabilize the car, when de Cesaris had snap oversteer in the middle of the corner because he was lifting the throttle. When the cars evolved, you can see also how he could use the technology in his benefit, altering the brake bias and differencial setups in almost every corner. His concentration and fitness, added to his imense ability made his racecraft unbeatable... In terms of pure speed, though, Hakkinen and Senna had the edge over him, in my opinion. Thanks for the great content! Cheers.

    • @joey-a.2412
      @joey-a.2412 Před 4 lety +16

      Can you do the driving styles Form hamilton verstappen and leclerc?

    • @eltonmsn
      @eltonmsn Před 4 lety +17

      Avoiding the second pilot to win, due to team radio calls, also dirty agression whose ruined the sport forever because is the new normal, also avoiding the second pilot to have the same cars with newest tech advances,
      He was a cheater at Benetton
      nobody talk about this because the winners can write the history however they want
      www.motorsport.com/f1/news/f1-teammate-says-schumacher-cheated-in-1994/415378/

  • @egelechad
    @egelechad Před 4 lety +2869

    Finally someone who doesn't just compare Senna and Schumacher, just gives their remunerates. Thank you.

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +219

      Cheers for the feedback.

    • @THEBUFUMAN.
      @THEBUFUMAN. Před 4 lety +7

      Yep!

    • @BismillahJannah
      @BismillahJannah Před 4 lety +10

      Kimi we miss u please come back to Scuderia !
      Jari Matti Latvala - Helsinki

    • @Butterfingers1989
      @Butterfingers1989 Před 4 lety +34

      True that. There is no greatest of all time in a sport that evolves every year.

    • @gilsondia
      @gilsondia Před 4 lety +10

      you can't compare a super talent driver with a cheater, yes schummacher won 7 times the tour, but among the driver he is well known as a cheater, just this make him incolarable with Senna, Simply the best...better than all the rest

  • @lifeschool
    @lifeschool Před 4 lety +1302

    You missed an important clip "When you spend so long sitting behind a driver in second place, you have lots of time to learn their driving style. Sometimes I drove aggressively like Senna, sometimes I drove smoothly like Alan, sometimes cleanly to conserve tyres. I could adapt my driving style to match my opponent, and use their special moves on the track. I was lucky to be able to learn from the best, from the greats, at the right time, and they give me those skills." - or words to that effect.

    • @WarriorsPhoto
      @WarriorsPhoto Před 3 lety +14

      Interesting points there. Hmmmm

    • @ralphlongo1975
      @ralphlongo1975 Před 3 lety +137

      We all learn the most by mimicking others behavior, it makes sense. Alain was ridiculously smooth, almost conservative. Ayrton was, well let's be honest, a hot head that was crazy fast. If Michael understood both those styles and when to use them, that's damned impressive.

    • @DDBmaster
      @DDBmaster Před 3 lety +24

      @@ralphlongo1975 as you mimicked other people just to be able to walk, to eat, to even speak a word. We see to learn. Problem is how well we can execute what we see

    • @_abk_3251
      @_abk_3251 Před 3 lety +37

      So basically ryosuke of F1? (Initial D reference)

    • @Twxii
      @Twxii Před 3 lety +4

      @@_abk_3251 That's what I was thinking lol

  • @Arthurzeiro
    @Arthurzeiro Před 3 lety +1300

    Remember, he'll forever remain as the last person to win a GP with an H pattern manual gearbox.

    • @lxvideostuff7200
      @lxvideostuff7200 Před 3 lety +60

      also as the man, who was hidden after a ski incident

    • @richardtickler8555
      @richardtickler8555 Před 3 lety +18

      unless they make that a rule again to improve entertainment

    • @mark4lev
      @mark4lev Před 3 lety +50

      The worrying thing for his competitors is that he was faster than them with a three pedal set up ie right foot braking.

    • @bbbccc9813
      @bbbccc9813 Před 3 lety +81

      @@mark4lev exactly 3rd in the championship in 1992 only 1 point behind Patrese who was in that monster Williams and outscoring Senna aswell bare in mind that was his first full season in F1 and out of the top 4 teams Benetton was the only team to use h pattern for the whole season. Imagine if he finished second that would be crazy...

    • @rodrrico
      @rodrrico Před 2 lety +1

      The B194 had paddle shift.

  • @Cre8Thought41
    @Cre8Thought41 Před 2 lety +57

    Schumacher was a student of driving. He clearly understood the dynamics of what his car was doing, how and why it was doing it. A master of driving technique and style. Simply one of, if not the greatest F1 driver ever.

    • @user-qu9ev6pv8e
      @user-qu9ev6pv8e Před měsícem

      He was still a cheat and a crap sportsman. Dirty Tricks Cabbage!

  • @slayer8actual
    @slayer8actual Před 4 lety +551

    I've heard something like this years ago about Schumacher's driving technique - he was like a human ABS/TCS/ESC system. His multitudes of micro-inputs of braking, throttle and steering were what made him such a great driver.

    • @ingvarhallstrom2306
      @ingvarhallstrom2306 Před 3 lety +26

      I think this is what makes all professional drivers better drivers than ordinary people, they're just more skilled doing those calculations while they're driving, like ten fold better than other people.

    • @stevenkenney9473
      @stevenkenney9473 Před 2 lety +31

      ^^^This. He was a human ABS/TCS. Remember the monaco race in the rain? Holy crap he almost lost it a dozen times and still pulled out the win.

    • @shirleycameron7718
      @shirleycameron7718 Před 2 lety

      Great driver ????????

    • @cleanenergyinside1921
      @cleanenergyinside1921 Před 2 lety +9

      @@shirleycameron7718 Yes, if you know Formula 1 cars back then, he was certainly a genius.

    • @purwantiallan5089
      @purwantiallan5089 Před 2 lety +4

      @@stevenkenney9473 Schumacher used similar style to Valentino Rossi in the wet.

  • @Invitingsauce
    @Invitingsauce Před 3 lety +580

    Dude was faster in the wet than other guys in the dry. He dominated his era and right up until he retired.

    • @nsewarte
      @nsewarte Před 3 lety +11

      Well 2010 to 13 wasnt a big era for him

    • @demdjen77
      @demdjen77 Před 3 lety +88

      @@nsewarte He was 43, had a 3 year pause and a neck injury.

    • @B..P..
      @B..P.. Před 3 lety +9

      If formula 1 used equal cars then schumacher would have never dominated.
      Having the best engineers and cars helps alot.

    • @m.jsouza2782
      @m.jsouza2782 Před 3 lety +10

      he didnt really dominate. He only started to win a lot in the begining of 00 when Ferrari had the only one car able to win races and Rubens Barrichelo was told to stay behind and shut up

    • @demdjen77
      @demdjen77 Před 3 lety +71

      @@m.jsouza2782 Hahahaha :))))) Really?
      All races before Austria 2002 could be said to have taken place in the 'team orders' Era. In that era, Schumacher won 57 races. Out of those wins, 21 of them were with Barrichello as partner, and 16 with Irvine, for a total of 37 at Ferrari, where I presume you mean the 'team orders' Era.
      Let's be honest here. In the 4 seasons that Irvine partnered Michael, he admitted that MSC was too quick for him. He was a contracted number two, but he had also made peace with the fact that MSC was simply quicker than him. Now, in this era, the only times team orders were implemented were:
      1. In Austria '98, when Michael was on a charge through the field (I.e. not for the win) and needed to make up time;
      2. In France '99 where MSC was running 5th and struggling with mismatched tyres and gearbox issues, Irvine 6th was told not to pass. Again not for the win.
      3. In Malaysia '99, for MSC to give the race win to Irvine for the championship battle with Mika.
      As for Rubens, the only confirmed team orders scenarios were:
      4. Austria 2001 (for 2nd)
      5. Austria 2002 (for the win).
      5 confirmed team orders.
      In 2000 Barrichello was never on similar pace as Schumacher. There was no scope for team orders to play a role in the race win. In 2001 it was closer between the two, but Michael won 11 races, and Rubens was nowhere close enough to think that any major statistics of Michael's career would have changed with a different team policy.
      After the team order ban post Austria '02, Schumacher won a further 7 races that year, 6 in the next, 13 in 2004 and 1 in 2005, with an additional 7 with Felipe as his team mate. That's still 34 wins. Add this to the 19 he won at Benetton 'untarnished' by team orders, and you still have 53 'non team order era' wins. More than Prost's total.

  • @crunchyfrog555
    @crunchyfrog555 Před 3 lety +425

    First time I saw Schumi was at Silverstone in first practice (can't remember what year - I do remember the Prost team being there and the noise their cars made was different). I stood at the very first kink at Maggot's. There was a gape in between the advertising boards there. All other cars going past had started braking by the time they passed that and they were glowing bright red. Schumi was the only one going past without any redness showing, he was INCREDIBLY late on the brakes and it was almost frightening to watch him lunge into a corner and somehow make it round.
    Quite how he managed it I'll never know but it broke my brain at the time.

    • @Dennzer1
      @Dennzer1 Před 2 lety +5

      😮

    • @Manu-Official
      @Manu-Official Před 2 lety +41

      Using maximum inertia to slingshot out of the corner, pointing at the apex, gently shifting the weight to the rear side, once he would hit the apex, he would input a lot more steering and driving on the front wheels (Alonso kind of does that too, but still a different style), the progressive throttle input would re-plant the back end gently, and that's when the slingshooting kicked him out of the corner perfectly planted and not losing grip. Most other drivers trying that would result in boiling the front tyres, and possibly losing the back end (guaranteed in the wet, only Senna could match this sort of thing).
      I remember watching Schumi on board cams, and hitting every apex lap after lap after lap, not even breaking a sweat. Even when everyone thought he was flat out, he still had even more in stock to pressure anyone who would dare coming close. Him and Senna are the two guys in F1 that I regard as human ABS/ESP/TSC masters of feeling the car down to a scale of milliseconds.

    • @sinanapenka9748
      @sinanapenka9748 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@Manu-Official aswell as Jim Clark, he really was one with any machine he stepped in.

    • @17xchampions
      @17xchampions Před 7 měsíci +2

      He is the GOAT, dude.

  • @stevenkenney9473
    @stevenkenney9473 Před 2 lety +49

    This was one of the best analysis of my all time favorite driver. The thing I loved about Schumacher was that he was "consistently" on the edge, getting the maximum performance out of any car, every corner every lap. This is why he really had a huge relationship with whoever was providing him tires. He knew he was always making tiny micro adjustments - feeling for the "edge" on every lap, every turn. It was amazing seeing him drive inferior cars for wins. Spain and Ferrari his first year if I recall was stunning. I could be wrong though but he pulled out wins nobody else could have with the same car.

  • @BenFreedmanRacing
    @BenFreedmanRacing Před 4 lety +891

    Wow the steering input comparison was cool to see, I haven’t seen traces shown and compared and explained so well.

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +52

      Thanks, that data is great.

    • @thanekrios3211
      @thanekrios3211 Před 4 lety +5

      @Ben Freedman Racing. Well not since the first time around at least...czcams.com/video/Uk2p2nRK-p4/video.html

    • @karelpipa
      @karelpipa Před 4 lety +2

      its from a very old video

    • @akkual
      @akkual Před 3 lety +21

      However, the analysis of the steering input is not fully correct/complete. The zig-zag that Schumacher does with his steering is the driving style of rally drivers. The purpose is to constantly feel the grip that car is carrying that is essential in rally driving, as you cannot trust the "track" conditions, as the grip is different in every corner.
      The idea is to add just tiny bit of change in the balance to the car to see how it reacts. If you are over the grip, the car won't react and won't give the feedback expected. That means you must modulate the throttle (or sometimes brake) to regain a bit of the grip to proceed as fast as possible - or if you have strong feedback, you can even add a bit of throttle. This is visible in the throttle curve of Schumacher - one can observe how he always makes a bigger change in the throttle right after the zig-zag.
      On track driving, it is "useless" technique, because usually you know quite well the grip already. But once you are at the absolute limit, it can make a big difference on track.
      There are two other world champions who were masters of this technique: Mika Häkkinen and Kimi Räikkönen. Both were quite notable opponents for Schumi. Today, I think Max Verstappen is really good at this, and that's why he is so fast on wet track.

    • @akkual
      @akkual Před 3 lety +2

      Here's a great example of Kalle Rovanperä on asphalt. Notice how he uses the steering exactly like Schumacher for his advance to feel the grip - and also how Kalle does not do that when the corner is obvious full throttle one: czcams.com/video/5aewugU5iuM/video.html

  • @asurada999
    @asurada999 Před 4 lety +540

    another lesser known fact about his driving style: during his earlier Benetton years, he used to have three speedometers installed on his dashboard, which displayed the minimum, maximum and current speed in corners, so he could always check if he was improving or going slower during an entire race, boosting his consistency. this also gave way to all sorts of experiments with different approaches to the racing line, carrying more or less speed on the straights depending on the circumstances. it then lead to his ultimate perception of the limit, as explained in the video

    • @darylbeecham381
      @darylbeecham381 Před 4 lety +37

      That was in the era of F-1 computers. Three speedometers??!! Can you imagine being on the edge in speed looking at all the gauges? Wow!

    • @alejandromoore6503
      @alejandromoore6503 Před 3 lety +6

      Sadly they Cheated cuz his car had TCS and a bunch of Electronic Helps when it was "Illegal"

    • @demdjen77
      @demdjen77 Před 3 lety +4

      @@darylbeecham381 Willem Toet worked at Benetton when Schumacher was there: www.linkedin.com/pulse/driving-formula-1-michael-schumacher-some-background-willem-toet?trk=portfolio_article-card_title

    • @eoinmurphy210
      @eoinmurphy210 Před 3 lety +2

      @Firstname Lastname as could be seen at the brazilian gp he had traction control,contributing to Sennas death,he was trying to beat an ilegal car.

    • @juventinos81
      @juventinos81 Před 3 lety +19

      @@eoinmurphy210 oh boy,you expanded the limit of stupidity with that comment .

  • @ThePenguinHere
    @ThePenguinHere Před 2 lety +58

    Michael Schumacher is one of the Motorsport greatest drivers and my childhood hero I wish him a good recovery from his skiing accident

  • @durban232
    @durban232 Před 3 lety +73

    “And Michael Schumacher is 37 seconds ahead, so he can refuel the car, change all four wheels, take off his helmet, have a smoke and a cup of tea, and rejoin in first.” - Murray Walker
    Superb video mate!

    • @DaveMcKeegan
      @DaveMcKeegan Před 3 lety +2

      Monaco 1997, that is the quote I will always remember Murray for

    • @truenoae8689
      @truenoae8689 Před 3 lety

      I think having a smoke and a cup of tea would take longer than 37 seconds

    • @clubpenguin13531
      @clubpenguin13531 Před 3 lety +3

      @@truenoae8689 not with how fast Michael is

    • @truenoae8689
      @truenoae8689 Před 3 lety

      @@clubpenguin13531 well played

  • @rubentra8448
    @rubentra8448 Před 4 lety +296

    Miss you Schumi. Keep fighting Michael.

  • @FaithlessEmoRacing
    @FaithlessEmoRacing Před 4 lety +241

    I think you kind of mentioned the reason I think schumi changed F1. He came in as a super fit, super focused driver that wasn’t had before.
    He was fit enough to run every lap at the limit and in control. Before him we often saw drivers back off during a race as their fitness waived.

    • @snowdog02112
      @snowdog02112 Před 4 lety +49

      I was gonna post the same thing, but wanted to see if anyone else remembered Michaels fanaticism towards fitness. He pretty much set the course for todays drivers as far as off-season training and diet. The reason he could remain so consistant lap after lap is he just did not fatigue. This was manifest in his ability set perfectly timed laps. If the team need five tenths off the next lap, Michael would deliver with uncanny precision. His wealth of talent matched with those Ferraris was beautiful to behold.

    • @FaithlessEmoRacing
      @FaithlessEmoRacing Před 4 lety +15

      Chris McLemore exactly. Modern day life style of F1 drivers of daily training and healthy diets owe a lot to schumi’s attitude.
      #keepfightingmichael

    • @Marc98338
      @Marc98338 Před 4 lety +9

      @@FaithlessEmoRacing Nothign do with Schumi. Basicly every sport this has become the norm. All sports evolve and the skilllevel gets higher and higher in every sport.

    • @Keepcalm-lovesports
      @Keepcalm-lovesports Před 3 lety +14

      @@Marc98338 And there is always a guy spearheading the movement. Borg, Schumi, ...

    • @eduardoazeredo3430
      @eduardoazeredo3430 Před 3 lety +8

      Before Schumacher, Senna was very focused on fitness too. In this sense, I believe Senna was more of a trailblazer. He got shocked with how exhausted he was after his first F1 finish and worked hard on it since then. But Schumacher on his prime was also known for having excellent fitness - Luciano Burti, who was Ferrari test driver and now is the commentator of F1 in Brazil, said once how impressive was to hear Schumacher's voice during a race and how it kept unchanged because of his incredible fitness and this was an important factor on Schumacher's consistency.

  • @kdwaynec
    @kdwaynec Před 2 lety +19

    I remember once, Schumacher and Mika Hakkinen were walking about after a race checking out the other's car. One of the commentators remarked that the difference between the two was that Michael knew what he was looking at and Mika didn't

  • @maxleitschuh7076
    @maxleitschuh7076 Před 4 lety +138

    Great video! I also recommend listening to the John Barnard episode of F1's Beyond the Grid podcast - he has some great insight into Schumacher's driving style. Basically, Schumacher would take a car that naturally had great front-end and turn-in, and then use his talent to keep the back end in order. That lines up well with what's in this video. Prost was the opposite - he liked a car with a very planted rear end, so the rear would naturally stay in line while Prost used his talent to create better turn-in than anybody else could manage in that car. Barnard actually preferred Prost's style, since Barnard always focused on creating a very stable rear end for his cars.
    Schumacher was also known for liking very stiff suspension setups. That made the car more difficult to drive - very knife-edge handling - but also faster if you could balance it on that edge. It also made the car more sensitive, which likely added to Schumacher's feel for what the car was doing. Put that together with his preference for a free rear end, and you had a car that was phenomenally difficult to drive, but ultimately faster if you had somebody with the talent to manage it. That explains why so few of Schumacher's teammates were able to come close to his pace, especially in the mid-90s Benettons that were notoriously difficult to drive.
    The other aspect of Schumacher's genius is that he could drive those knife-edge cars on the very limit for every corner of every lap without using his full mental capacity. He could keep track of everything else that was going on in a race while tearing around faster than anybody else. There's a great story about the 1994 Hungarian GP. In one of the most demanding cars on one of the most demanding tracks in F1, Schumacher was leading late when he suddenly called the team on the radio to ask about his teammate Verstappen's strategy. He then suggested a new strategy for Verstappen and helped the team implement it to get Verstappen on the podium, all while continuing to dominate the race. It was like he didn't even have to think about driving faster than everybody else. That's a big reason why he and Brawn made such a potent strategic combo.

    • @Mexxx65
      @Mexxx65 Před 3 lety +1

      I disagree with your comment "Schumacher was also known for liking very stiff suspension setups. That made the car more difficult to drive - very knife-edge handling" . All F1 drivers, make their cars as easy for them to drive as possible, so yes they have to worry less about keeping the car on the road, even when approaching 10/10ths driving, and more time on the actual race, and changing race strategy's. I am convinced Michael set all his F1 cars up for tremendous front end bight, as most F1 drivers try to do. Lewis Hamilton today for instance.

    • @adityanarain9428
      @adityanarain9428 Před 3 lety +3

      Lol all 4 time WDCs need a stable rear

    • @DEE-qu5mc
      @DEE-qu5mc Před 3 lety +29

      That's a great story, never heard it before. I do recall the story of hungary 98' though.
      Ross Brawn: “Michael, you have 19 laps to pull out 25 seconds. We need 19 qualifying laps from you.”
      Michael: “Ok. Thank you.”

    • @DEE-qu5mc
      @DEE-qu5mc Před 2 lety +5

      @@Mexxx65
      Very true. Very-knife-edge handling is how he liked it.

    • @JustSomeDinosaurPerson
      @JustSomeDinosaurPerson Před 2 lety +17

      @@Mexxx65 You are free to disagree, but your comment is erroneously wrong. You really can't just setup the cars to be "easiest to drive" when you have so many different racing styles and each pilot differs tremendously. That's just not how it works. You have to engineer the car to match the driver.

  • @GunsNGames1
    @GunsNGames1 Před 3 lety +61

    I remember when I was a big fan of Schumacher when I was a kid, my dad would bring me toy F1 cars and I would pretend Schumacher was driving it, watched F1 on TV all the time. It's been almost 15 years already.

  • @jonssi2711
    @jonssi2711 Před 4 lety +8

    Michael Schumacher was and is my idol. I loved how he could win with a car that was much slower and took the car he had to its maxiumum. I loved the 90's and his last race with ferrari when he droppep to the back and made an unbeliveable drive back to the fronrunners, he showed everyone the magical driveing of his whole career. Just imagine if he would have continued 2 or 3 years moore with mercedes, he would be a 8 or 9 time world champion, he is the best to ever do it.

  • @greavous93
    @greavous93 Před 2 lety +9

    When asked about his driving style during an interview years ago, Schumacher explained how the car spoke to him when he was driving at the "limit" and that was how he was able to do the things he did. The interviewer then asked how that differed when driving in the rain. Mike said the car still spoke to him in the wet , but it only whispered.

  • @weallfollowmanutd
    @weallfollowmanutd Před 3 lety +76

    My first experience of seeing Schumacher live attending a race was at Silverstone in 2005, when that particular Ferrari wasn't a front running car.
    I watched this red car turn in, in Friday practice on a surface that was 'green' and everyone was building up speed and at turn one, (a mighty corner) this red car at the absolute limit on a near flat out corner lost the rear end and the crowd went crazy, because the car was out of control mid corner and within milliseconds was corrected all the way through with reactions incomprehensible. I was absolutely stunned. You just knew that it was something superhuman. I couldn't get over what I just saw.

    • @chanchaniceman
      @chanchaniceman Před 3 lety +7

      Man being able to watch the guy at his prime definitely must be a surreal feeling

    • @masterfok636
      @masterfok636 Před 3 lety

      Schumacher didn't join Ferrari until 96.

    • @squadric7722
      @squadric7722 Před 3 lety +1

      @@chanchaniceman i watched him at maranello when he was test driving. was unreal how fast he was

    • @gerhardvaneeden5615
      @gerhardvaneeden5615 Před 2 lety

      @MaxG: Got goosebumps reading that!

  • @rockzs74r
    @rockzs74r Před 4 lety +213

    Schumacher biggest asset is actually his development driving skills. He is said to speak the Mechanic language. If you walk around the paddock and ask who is the best driver is the answer might vary but, if you ask who is the best development driver is its always going to be Schumacher

    • @romainneau8915
      @romainneau8915 Před 4 lety +7

      Or Alain Prost

    • @julianruther4550
      @julianruther4550 Před 4 lety +30

      It's difficult to compare a regular car you can buy at a car dealer with a Formula One car but I think that Michael Schumacher had a big advantage when it came to development because of his education. After he finished school Michael Schumacher enjoyed an apprenticeship as a car mechanic from 1986 to 1989 which he finished successfully with his apprenticeship exam. So when he came into Formula 1 Michael Schumacher was a trained car mechanic who knew very well about the functionality of cars in general.

    • @sanchezking6188
      @sanchezking6188 Před 4 lety +21

      Absolutely, thats the definitive difference between Schumacher and everybody else. Senna was quite fanatic about tuning the car as well, but yet he didnt quite have the same ability as Schumacher to create as much productivity and ultimately churn out the numbers. Other drivers could help a team, some could improve a team, a few could even improve a team dramatically, but only Schumacher could make a team. And yet he goes off into the wilderness to ski around huge boulders...

    • @shaunhutchinson4707
      @shaunhutchinson4707 Před 4 lety +12

      Actually no, I thought it was the opposite? Rubens was the one known for knowing how to setup the car, and Schumacher relied a lot on his input for setups. However what Schumacher was good at, was feedback on what the car was doing at any corner on any lap.

    • @gold333
      @gold333 Před 4 lety +6

      And yet one of his teambosses is quoted as saying: "technically, Schumacher is nothing special"

  • @reugeot9058
    @reugeot9058 Před 4 lety +157

    I remember watching Schum's car during races and it seemed to be sliding sideways into each corner. Like the tail of the car was turning with the front wheels. So you're explanation of how he did that makes a lot of sense.

    • @kristupasantanavicius9093
      @kristupasantanavicius9093 Před 4 lety +15

      @voice of reason I don't think high rear bias would work. He was micro drifting each corner. Its like balancing a stick on your hand. He was going just a little bit too fast to cause the back of the car to step out.

    • @kristupasantanavicius9093
      @kristupasantanavicius9093 Před 4 lety +1

      @voice of reason Why? Nothing your with your comment.

  • @giannimotta5823
    @giannimotta5823 Před 3 lety +53

    Schu comes from a modest family background, but he and his brother literally grew up on a cart track. Their father was the guy who had the rental cart business at the track.
    When they were kids they used to grab the old tyres out of the trash bin which the richer kids had thrown away. I guess that’s when he learned how to get the best lap times out of his material.
    Basically all those years until Schu got hired by the Mercedes Junior Team at 18y/o he had lesser resources while being more sucessful than the competion. It were those years of constant struggle against hardships and the need to be more sucessful with lesser resources that formed Schu into that brilliant driver and athlete.

  • @Brad-il9mw
    @Brad-il9mw Před 2 lety +11

    Watching Shumacher in the Benetton days you got the feeling of what this video has explained without fully analysing it or understanding why. It was just exciting to watch and you could just tell it was special not anywhere near the ordinary.

  • @irrsinnrainer
    @irrsinnrainer Před 4 lety +29

    I recently rewatched the the Belgium Grand Prix from 1995 where Schumacher started from 16, stayed on Slicks during the first rain and won at the end. I was seven years old when that race actually happened and of course didn't know what went on just was happy that the fellow German guy my father was a fan of won.
    But watching it back now I realised how great of a performance I have witnessed. He was an amazingly talented driver and then in the early 2000s Ferrari managed to give him a beast of a car on a regular basis. And it became one hell of a pairing.

    • @ale03000
      @ale03000 Před 3 lety +4

      Would have won 2005 IF stupid FIA did not remove tyre changes, 2006 was super close too, shouldn't retire so early, would won a few more times . .

  • @mandst5466
    @mandst5466 Před 4 lety +149

    People who say silly things like “it’s ALL down to the car in F1” need to watch this. Sure if you put the best driver in the best car he will dominate (Hamilton : Mercedes), but if you put the best driver in a slower car he will destroy his team mate and finish several places higher than the car deserves by the end of the season, (Alonso : Ferrari). 😎Wishing Michael the best possible recovery 🙏🏼

    • @Manu-Official
      @Manu-Official Před 2 lety

      The Ferraris were the superior cars though. That said, put a killer driver in the superior car and you cannot lose. Schumacher also had killer strategy to a point of not hesitating to being nasty (IE Monaco qualifying 2004 or 2005 I think, where he pretended to miss the last turn [LOL] and blocked everyone behind him and thus they could not finish their qualifying laps). The dude knew the rule book inside out, and he used every string on his bow. Back in the day he also had the better tyres, that was demonstrated with the Indianapolis fiasco in 2005. I remember Schumi going for power laps in ultra soft tyres, and pitting quite a bit more. He would do 10 laps with massive, much faster times at 5 to 8 seconds faster per lap, and that would enable him to pit more often.

    • @mandst5466
      @mandst5466 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Manu-Official Can’t argue with any of that Manu, he was absolutely focused and ruthless….. He certainly blew the Jordan team away when he first drove F1 with his talent and “spare mental capacity” He would have been a formidable Luftwaffe pilot in WWII for sure !

    • @JustSomeDinosaurPerson
      @JustSomeDinosaurPerson Před 2 lety +13

      @@Manu-Official The Ferraris definitely were not the superior cars though lmao They had huge problems by the time Michael joined and even as he and the team whipped the car into condition, they still weren't indisputably the best car on the track, especially not against Mclaren. Plenty of the cars matched or were even better than the Ferrari. That's what makes pilots like Senna and Schumacher so phenomenal, they outpaced rivals in cars that weren't the best or were only just as good as the competing cars.

    • @ryanb7385
      @ryanb7385 Před 2 lety +4

      The only team mate hamilton ever destroyed was the useless guy at mclaren whos name escapes me. I mean even Bottas outqualifies him in like 1/3rd of races...

    • @CosmicSeeker69
      @CosmicSeeker69 Před 2 lety

      best driver in a slower car he will destroy his team mate and finish several places higher than the car deserves - George Russel

  • @akacurmurdar1
    @akacurmurdar1 Před 3 lety +5

    I used to watch F1 just for Schumacher, as many others did, and just like them, I didn't consciously understood what set him apart but now I do, thank you.

  • @samikshathirani2507
    @samikshathirani2507 Před 4 lety +55

    The biggest regret of my life is not seeing him in person at a grand prix. I love him so much

  • @tomarkadi6612
    @tomarkadi6612 Před 4 lety +236

    Berger and Alesi were not able to handle the Benetton of Michael.. then...Berger recognized how brilliant he was.

    • @demdjen77
      @demdjen77 Před 4 lety +34

      Bergers theory: How Schumacher bypassed the problem
      At that time Berger had an idea how Schumacher managed to reach the absolute limit with the car suddenly breaking loose on bumps. And with a proactive driving style. "Schumacher's sensor technology was totally geared to that, because the car had built it that way from the start, and he could handle it - he probably instinctively counter-steered it before," Berger says in a discussion with Motorsport-Total.com. "It was so hard for me to understand that the last five-tenths of a second are so difficult."
      That was also the moment in which he realized what an exceptional artist his then intimate enemy Schumacher was, which he also dismantled his last doubts: "Who had this car so confidently in the border area under control, had to be absolute extra class."
      translate.google.si/translate?hl=sl&sl=de&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.motorsport-total.com%2Fformel-1%2Fnews%2Fwarum-benetton-nach-schumacher-das-siegen-verlernte-16121302&fbclid=IwAR1abneSUy6PAo-lLkvSjhZxk8fgvnG1AZ4upV12H5zhzQIY3cZdY2RPxm0

    • @danigonzalez4299
      @danigonzalez4299 Před 4 lety +8

      Well Berger and Alesi where actually pretty bad at testing and took Benetton like holidays

    • @tomarkadi6612
      @tomarkadi6612 Před 4 lety +3

      Damjan Stevanovic EXACTLY 🙏🏻

    • @THEBUFUMAN.
      @THEBUFUMAN. Před 4 lety +7

      after that Berger changed. Michael was a young brillant driver whit the "popo-meter"

    • @stevenlarratt3638
      @stevenlarratt3638 Před 4 lety

      Totally different cars and setup...

  • @Sideways_social
    @Sideways_social Před 4 lety +130

    I swear everything you make is perfectly informative. I've actually learned a lot and I wanna say thank you

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +13

      Thanks! Glad you're learning.

  • @barny325
    @barny325 Před 4 lety +18

    After the video, i stood up and clapped my hands. Thank you. Never saw Schumacher's skills this way. Thanks a lot!

  • @bazil83
    @bazil83 Před 3 lety +2

    For me, Schumacher's driving style at Ferrari in the 2000s was his style absolutely refined and perfected.
    If you watch the onboards and focus on the nose of the car, keeping the steering wheel below and track above, in your periphery, you get a real idea about the attitude of the car through a corner. He braked hard into corners, shifted the weight to the front axel, and then began rotating the car. I've no idea about the specifics of the setup of the car, but from that initial turn-in, he managed to energise the rear, making the front end the major pivot point, modulating throttle and steering input for best rotation. Around mid-corner, he'd unwind the lock on the steering wheel (much earlier than other drivers), often ending up with it straight early after the apex, yet the car would still be rotating - getting the perfect slip angle allowing him to then apply throttle earlier. It was an absolute art form.
    The fact he managed to do this (relatively) flawlessly lap after lap after lap (often being asked by the pit wall to put in 10-15 qualifying laps in the race to make the strategy work) demonstrated his absolute mastery on the track.

  • @nitrox150
    @nitrox150 Před 4 lety +213

    When you apply this logic, it makes sense why some of Schumacher's best moments for Mercedes were in the wet, Canada 2011 where he was up there with the Red Bulls and McLarens.
    Or if look at British GP 2012 qualifying, Alonso and Webber had 2 runs on the intermediate where as Mercedes only sent Michael for one because they made a mistake and sent him on the full wets, meaning he only had 1 lap in the last 3 mins to get a time in and he only ended only 2 tenths off pole in the car that was a second or more off the pace in the race the day after, had he gone for 2 runs like the others, I'm sure he would have been on pole. German GP the race after he qualified 4th in the rain too.
    The problem with Michael's comeback is his ability to maximise a car that doesn't suit his style had diminished, and this stood out even more because the Mercedes was generally 0.5-1.0 sec slower than the front teams. In the rain, as it always does, neutralized the field and this inherent problem was covered up, allowing him to for the top positions. They worked the Mercedes better to suit Michael's style in 2012 hence he was generally a match for Nico or faster, but that generation of F1 was never going to suit him, so for him to be so competitve in 2012 at his age of 43 speaks volumes to who the real GOAT is. A lot of people keep saying Nico thrased Michael in 3 seasons, he never, Michael's car failured a good 10 times between 2011 and 2012 whilst he was ahead of Nico in the races.

    • @hdsempro62
      @hdsempro62 Před 3 lety +25

      Also, the tires back then were notorious for being very soft and wearing out really quickly, so is style of always microdrifting the car to rotate it would have caused more stress on the tires which probably also hurt him more than other drivers

    • @V12F1Demon
      @V12F1Demon Před 3 lety +9

      When Schumacher returned testing bans were introduced and major focus was was on simulators as F1 was trying to cut costs in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. This deprived him of getting a feel for the car and this showed up in qualifying even though his race pace was better than Rosberg's. He wasn't able to get the most from the car. Has Schumacher returned just one or two years before, he might have been able to develop a feel for the new engines. Don't forget, even with things like DRS it was virtually impossible to overtake Schumacher as we saw at Monza when he was instructed to allow Hamilton to overtake after several failed attempts.

    • @pokkaizemma2326
      @pokkaizemma2326 Před 3 lety

      @@V12F1Demon I am a Schumacher fan and prefer him over HAM, but we should be realistic here. The reason HAM could not overtake MSC in Monza was wrong gear Ratios

    • @V12F1Demon
      @V12F1Demon Před 3 lety +2

      @@pokkaizemma2326 HAM had the benefit of DRS which neutralized that effect. Infact, the McLaren had better cornering speed which allowed HAM to brake later than MSC and this is where he would get up to MSC on the exit. Despite the faster, better balanced, late-breaking ability of the McLaren he was unable to get past bec MSC positioned the car expertly going into and out of turns. Ironically, HAM did the same thing to ROS in 2015 and 16 at Hungary or Austria, I forget.

    • @nitrox150
      @nitrox150 Před 3 lety +3

      @@pokkaizemma2326 This is true but I don't think any other driver would have had the smarts or defended that aggresively against Hamilton and hence kept the position for so long, you could argue Michael deserved a penalty for pushing Lewis on to the grass but I think Lewis learnt a lot about hard racing that race and a few years later he started pushing Rosberg off the road in the same fashion.
      Michael was the star of that race purely because he went from 8th on the grid to 3rd, attacked Alonso for 2nd then eventually the pace of the car made him fall back to 5th.

  • @BenjiBoy09
    @BenjiBoy09 Před 2 lety +10

    He's still the greatest in my eyes.

  • @brathahn69
    @brathahn69 Před 3 lety +20

    This man is so special and it's so sad what happened to him.

  • @Skarloc10
    @Skarloc10 Před 3 lety +8

    That all combined with a on track attitude, that didn´t accept compromises made him sooo good. Some might call it "ruthless" or "ugly" what he did at times but this was another aspect that made him an ultimate winner. About that particular aspect (not about the driving technique) he was quite like Senna. The Brazilian also had a "either you break or we crash, I won`t change the line" attitude.

  • @MrSteeleFPV
    @MrSteeleFPV Před 4 lety +229

    Great Video man Really learning a lot from your channel 🙏

    • @mikeevans6926
      @mikeevans6926 Před 3 lety +1

      I love that you are into these channels too man. Big fan 😍

    • @flywithtb5005
      @flywithtb5005 Před 3 lety +1

      Waiting for Mr Steel to open a simracing channel called Mr Carbonfiber

    • @xoJOBYox
      @xoJOBYox Před 3 lety

      This guy basically copied an official formula 1 documentary almost word for word.

  • @ioancobarzan7089
    @ioancobarzan7089 Před 2 lety +6

    One of my favorite driver, he was squeezing as much as he could from any car and was passionate about it same like my other favorite Senna, with a different driving style, but sharing the same passion. And I think that all about racing. THE PASSION.

  • @Quixpeed
    @Quixpeed Před 7 měsíci +1

    What brought me into following F1 is Schumacher himself, always reading the headlines with his name and articles speak of him in great praising sense, it made want to know why is he so good!!! then I became so attached to watching him every weekend, the amount of dedication he has and consistency in his performance is beyond anything i have ever scene in any discipline in life and not only sport. he is phenomenally talented, and he is dearly missed as well... wish him the Legend well and recovery.

  • @hariw834
    @hariw834 Před 3 lety +1

    Schumacher is probably the only driver who looked the same when was winning cart championships in 1987 at the age of 18 to when he finally retired at the age 43 in 2012.

  • @Tsukuyomi8
    @Tsukuyomi8 Před 4 lety +31

    Briatore was right about Schumacher...he fought through so many eras and adversaries... Villeneuve,Hill,Prost,Mansell,Senna, Coulthard,Hakkinnen, Raikkonnen, JPM and ultimately Alonso...he had top class competitiveness from his rivals throughout his career.

    • @Bahamuttiamat
      @Bahamuttiamat Před 4 lety +3

      Let's not forget nico Rosberg. Didn't fair particularly well though.

    • @CappyRev
      @CappyRev Před 4 lety +4

      Pfft he needed illegal driver aids to beat Senna

    • @2003wrx64
      @2003wrx64 Před 4 lety +5

      @@CappyRev oh please, Senna was a hack compared to Schumacher.

    • @CappyRev
      @CappyRev Před 4 lety +5

      @@2003wrx64 LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL. Even Schumacher said Senna was the best ever. About the yobbo opinion I'd expect from someone that drives a 2003 wrx.

    • @TheKestevon
      @TheKestevon Před 4 lety +1

      @@Bahamuttiamat It's okay though young Nico was also a champion in 2016.

  • @djlenihan
    @djlenihan Před 2 lety +3

    I've never said this about a channel but I love this one. Dude has a ridiculous amount of not only knowledge (anyone can get that) but understanding. This was a very nerdy video but still couldn't turn it off. Keep them coming!

  • @TryNotToHate1
    @TryNotToHate1 Před 3 lety +13

    I miss Michael Schumacher so much... legendary badass. I hope he can at least know how much the world loves him. 😔💙

  • @Gambit8319
    @Gambit8319 Před 4 lety +47

    Amazing insight.... not enough is done on the Red Baron and that special visual driving style of his.. thanks #keepfighting

    • @Gambit8319
      @Gambit8319 Před 4 lety +1

      Michael also showed versatility in driving skills with his stint in Mercedes sports cars prior to F1... legendary period and cars

  • @qasimansari7540
    @qasimansari7540 Před 4 lety +11

    Great video! I was a huge Schumacher fan when he was at Ferrari. This was very informative. Thanks!

  • @markhager4508
    @markhager4508 Před 3 lety +1

    It’s refreshing to hear clear, concise, and expert driving skills explained in this kind of format. I’ve been a professional driving instructor for military and law enforcement since 2009 and current stunt coordinator for over 30 years. I will pass your channel onto all my future students. The 100% adhesion rule is explained far better in this brief video than I’ve ever heard.
    Best to you and all your future endeavors.

  • @mandeepreehal5779
    @mandeepreehal5779 Před 3 lety +7

    He was my fav, I grew up watching him after Senna was tragically taken away from this world Schumi took the mantle up and provided us with Magic, what a talent who worked extremely hard to keep at the front and always performed regardless what motor he had.

  • @kieranpenrose
    @kieranpenrose Před 3 lety +20

    For someone who occasionally drives there 1.0 ecoboost focus to the shops i am certainly learning alot more then I need 😂

    • @cinegraphics
      @cinegraphics Před 3 lety +15

      You could greatly improve your home-shop-home lap times.

  • @jeremyschumacher4932
    @jeremyschumacher4932 Před 4 lety +8

    Great video Scott, big thank you ... I describe Michael as the most complete driver to ever drive an F1 car, unfortunately he often doesn’t the credit he deserves from fans whom focus on the controversy’s. But those whom really understand F1, understand what an incredible talent he was and why his style, both in and out of the car, is the yardstick in which young drivers today are measured against. Keep Fighting Michael.

    • @Ryanshaw6778
      @Ryanshaw6778 Před 2 měsíci

      Hes the best f1 driver of all time

  • @levrone0075
    @levrone0075 Před 3 lety

    thank you for sharing this, clearly a lot of experience, knowledge and effort has gone into this video and you have identified some fantastic footage. brilliant channel!

  • @timoschatzinikolaou5046
    @timoschatzinikolaou5046 Před 3 lety +1

    What can you say about this video other than "well done,sir"?! A worthy sub, my friend! Flawlessly put together all the information to let us know exactlly what happened, how it happened and what it achieved. Schumi was really one of a kind, real genius!

  • @mikeellisonhimself
    @mikeellisonhimself Před 3 lety +6

    Thanks for the explanation. It always struck me in the early Benetton days that his entry was a visibly sharper angle than the others, now I know why.

  • @jockellis
    @jockellis Před 4 lety +6

    If you have ever seen Schumacher in a kart race video, you might notice that he is a master tactician.

  • @tazwest6992
    @tazwest6992 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video and really good;)Thx Schumy for 19 years of great amazing racing keep fighting;)

  • @caledramsahoi8579
    @caledramsahoi8579 Před 3 lety

    Thankyou so much for this video, this is fantastic Scott. Michael Schumacher is my favourite F1 driver of all time and it's important that someone pays good tribute to his insane ability instead of comparing him to lewis.

  • @royalstarfish17
    @royalstarfish17 Před 3 lety +8

    Once I heard that Shumacher was so great, that he spoke calmly during racing, like he was cornering flat out a corner while thinking what he was going to eat for dinner on his private jet.

    • @alreadywalkingdead
      @alreadywalkingdead Před rokem

      because he was driving on autopilot basically. his throttle input, braking and steering is automatic. he doesn't think about it. when you're racing for a couple of laps, you won't be even thinking that you're racing

    • @m1co294
      @m1co294 Před 7 měsíci

      Muscle memory

  • @beemrmem3
    @beemrmem3 Před 4 lety +10

    I remember in the early 2000’s when Michael came out for one lap qualifying and was like a second and a half faster at Melbourne. All the teams looking at their monitors like “fuck...”

    • @steveanacorteswa3979
      @steveanacorteswa3979 Před 2 lety

      MikeE would come out late so he didn't have to kick everyones ass twice, then boom ok Pos #1, lets have Schnitzel

  • @z06king
    @z06king Před 3 lety

    your passionate explanation of the small inputs Schumi didmade me smile so big the whole time. pointing out how I am inconsistent at "feeling the car" thanks, Scott!!

  • @Hyraethian
    @Hyraethian Před 4 lety

    That consistency in the turn is amazing.
    Another great Video.

  • @rohandrummer
    @rohandrummer Před 4 lety +35

    Schumi forever!❤️❤️❤️

  • @LR-wc3rq
    @LR-wc3rq Před 3 lety +5

    Schumacher is basically driving a f1 race like it's a drag strip with some corners mixed in.

  • @willcat636
    @willcat636 Před 2 lety

    What an amazing explanation! Your videos are so well put together and informative. Would love to watch F1 with your commentary.

  • @mugshotmarley
    @mugshotmarley Před 3 lety

    As a newer fan of F1, especially the science and technology behind it, I really appreciate these types of videos. Thanks for breaking it down and helping to visualize the science of grip and driving styles. New fan and subscriber!

  • @roadrunner6224
    @roadrunner6224 Před 4 lety +225

    Imagine what could have been if Ferrari actually had build good cars for more than only half of his time with them.

    • @georgeyacoub6719
      @georgeyacoub6719 Před 4 lety +77

      If he didn't retire in 06 we would have won the 07 and 08 title

    • @j3d89
      @j3d89 Před 4 lety +32

      @@georgeyacoub6719 08 yes, 07 doubt it.. McLaren was miles ahead.. the only reason Kimi won was because Alonso and Lewis ego plus the idiotness of Ron autodestroyed their title hopes

    • @TheKestevon
      @TheKestevon Před 4 lety +44

      @@j3d89 Michael was really good even when the cars he had driven was a bit slower than the top cars.

    • @boltmix7294
      @boltmix7294 Před 4 lety +21

      @@j3d89 Umm no, the only reason Alonso and Hamilton came close to Kimi wad because he had more mechanical issues and DNF's.
      He would hav EASILY had 3 or 4 more wins if his car wasn't so unreliable.
      He was *100%* the better driver then both of them in 2007 and the only reason they came close to him was because Kimi had shit luck and Mclaren had great cars

    • @GloomGaiGar
      @GloomGaiGar Před 4 lety +5

      ferrari was also having an internal war at the time

  • @levukas9854
    @levukas9854 Před 4 lety +258

    This is for the people, who said Schumchar was a mid-tier driver, cheater..... I mean he was something else, people need to respect legends and it doesn't matter if it is Lewis, Ayrton, Micheal or Fangio. All of them from different eras, all exceptional.

    • @user-ux2ho6ps7j
      @user-ux2ho6ps7j Před 4 lety +10

      Illegal traction control 100%

    • @sv52308
      @sv52308 Před 4 lety +28

      What about Sebastian Vettel he got 4 championship in a row and the youngest peson to win a world championship in f1

    • @stpbasss3773
      @stpbasss3773 Před 4 lety +27

      Ive never heard anyone say he's a mid level driver lmao, cheater yes but mid tier nope. He did all kinds of shit that any other driver wouldn't be allowed to.

    • @stpbasss3773
      @stpbasss3773 Před 4 lety +14

      @@sv52308 what about Seb?? That's a whole different video on it's own. Seb is definitely a legend in his own right.

    • @sv52308
      @sv52308 Před 4 lety

      @@stpbasss3773 okay sure 😁👍

  • @sylentxtinction2097
    @sylentxtinction2097 Před 4 lety +2

    Schumacher nailed it in his own words. His ability to perceive and react to feedback is/was insane. Most drivers couldn't even bare to drive his car. He thrived on feedback, as all drivers of F1 caliber do... but he took it took extremes. Most drivers would literally be frazzled after just a few laps trying to wrestle the feedback he preferred in his steering and suspension preferences.

  • @west4555
    @west4555 Před 2 lety

    Excellent Analysis Sir!! Happy I found your channel!! Thank you for all the hard work!

  • @hooligan1017
    @hooligan1017 Před 4 lety +4

    The first driver to truly dominate F1 as a hole in a way we’ve never seen before. Yes there have been moments where his morality of racing has come into question. But you can not deny the impact this guy had on the sport as a whole and the records he wrote.

  • @ElPolloDiablo666
    @ElPolloDiablo666 Před 4 lety +39

    I've seen/read elsewhere that a lot of Schumacher's speed came from his tremendous feel in the pedals, and that he would balance the car and steer it slightly by slightly overlapping the brake and accelerator, and generally having perfect footwork. Do you think this is the case Scott?

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +19

      Yes I'd agree with that, pedal work is key.

  • @masterlesstheband
    @masterlesstheband Před 3 lety

    Really loving your channel. You're going to real depth. Cool to see the overlays as well. We always here the commentators referring to them but never get to actually see them. Top job!

  • @GavinJGallagher
    @GavinJGallagher Před 4 lety

    Fascinating video Scott - I watched Schumacher perform at a total of 11 Formula One races during his career. Such an exciting driver to watch live on the track - he was such a master. Love the channel mate, good luck #KPI26

  • @xing2937
    @xing2937 Před 4 lety +9

    I drove 2 GoKart races with(against) him in my youth, the gokart scene in this time in germany was pretty hard and competetive.
    he dominated alone with this technique so hard, difference in gokart is that you do most of this with your bodyweight and movement
    and he was well known for that :-).
    his cars got way more heavier so he had to adapt to this(his?) technique you showed here.
    nicely video :)

    • @KeldonA
      @KeldonA Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, sometime in the 00s there was a friendly GoKart race between F1 drivers, and Michael completely floored them all.

  • @mavsun
    @mavsun Před 4 lety +4

    Love these videos Scott!
    Would be absolutely awesome if you could continue this series and add Hakkinen, Raikkonen, Alonso, Vettel and Hamilton too.
    Thanks for making the quarantine just that bit more bearable!

    • @LordBhorak
      @LordBhorak Před 3 lety

      Häkkinen, the only driver able to challenge Schumacher during his prime.

  • @lino329
    @lino329 Před 4 lety

    Love this kind of content, great job!

  • @shervvvv
    @shervvvv Před 3 lety

    Awesome as always, can never wait to drive again after watching your videos. Thanks for your work!

  • @meatmansoccer958
    @meatmansoccer958 Před 4 lety +8

    Great video, some really good insight. Schumacher was amazingly fit and in an actual race was there ever anyone better? Yes, others like Senna were better qualifiers but over a tough race distance MSc really hard to beat

  • @mrdraw2087
    @mrdraw2087 Před 4 lety +61

    Schumacher used extreme oversteer to help the car turn, which made him really fast, especially in the mid-90s. This driving style, however, would also wear out the rear tires faster, which especially hurt him at the end of his career.

    • @Jejking
      @Jejking Před 4 lety +20

      Please tell it like it is. Compared to his team mates and with his style, he usually could stay out a tad longer than the others. IF tyre wear ever was a weakness, he worked a way around it with his feel, AND car setup. His style was made a bit more for sprint racing, but it never degraded his tyres that he'd run into massive troubles, at least not before his team mates. Even in 2011 he stayed in the paddock til 5am to work out the car and its flaws.

    • @mrdraw2087
      @mrdraw2087 Před 4 lety +10

      @@Jejking He was struggling a lot in 2011 and 2012 with rear tire degradation, which at that time was a Mercedes weakness as well. During the Bridgestone era tire wear was less of an issue, even though he struggled to get the maximum out of the tires in 2005.

    • @stpbasss3773
      @stpbasss3773 Před 4 lety +6

      @@schumiisking He literally pulled that oversteer and it hurting him later lmao. If shumi set up his cars with extreme oversteer then we would have heard someone mention it through all the years he raced and all the documentaries and videos on shumi. When he was on Mercedes they sucked, people tend to forget that Mercedes wasn't instantly successful when they returned to F1. Shit, most people don't even know Mercedes was in F1 and successful before Ferrari and they left the sport in the 30s because of a crazy crash that a Merc flew into the crowd killing 80 people and then Ferrari finally could win lmao.

    • @mrdraw2087
      @mrdraw2087 Před 4 lety +3

      @@schumiisking Thank you for your respectful and interesting comment.

    • @boltmix7294
      @boltmix7294 Před 4 lety +1

      @@stpbasss3773 Umm Mercedes had succes sure.
      But they were barely better then Ferrari in the past

  • @vishnooadithya8275
    @vishnooadithya8275 Před 3 lety

    Real good video , really like the way you break it down. Insightful!

  • @vste8
    @vste8 Před 3 lety

    Hands down the best f1 analysis channel, great video!

  • @muktathesecond8686
    @muktathesecond8686 Před 4 lety +5

    Nice video, well explained 👍! To all those who keep saying he didn't deserve his championships, well, good luck with that. His driving style and technique were unique, and I have always loved seeing him race the best drivers from his time, so to me he still stands on p1, along with Senna and Prost. Keep those videos coming!

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety

      I should have said at the start that the video has nothing to do with him winning championships, just his style and technique.

  • @chinballs2
    @chinballs2 Před 3 lety +3

    Schumacher's driving style was exemplary- can't be beaten!

  • @londonlore5881
    @londonlore5881 Před 2 lety

    Just stumbled onto this video and it’s superb. 👏🏽👍🏽 Love the tear down of his technique, the old footage, and the engine noises are magnificent!😋Thank you, and this is awesome content. Subscribing! 👍🏽

  • @kwladner
    @kwladner Před 4 lety

    Great content as always! Kudos to you!

  • @MrJoshuapoon
    @MrJoshuapoon Před 4 lety +8

    The fact that Schumi was fighting for the champion with Jacques in 97 and Mika in 98 and 99 shows how good he is. Ferrari's cars at that time were inferior.

  • @mubarakahmad8936
    @mubarakahmad8936 Před 4 lety +18

    Please make a video about Gilles Villeneuve driving style, that would certainly be interesting because of his unorthodox approach to racing.

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +8

      Great idea.

    • @mubarakahmad8936
      @mubarakahmad8936 Před 4 lety

      @@Driver61 Thanks Man ! Your the best !

    • @CheesyHotDogPuff
      @CheesyHotDogPuff Před 4 lety +4

      Mubarak Ahmad It seems like he was similar to Schumacher in a way, always sliding his car into corners to get a better exit, but just taken to an extremely aggressive level

    • @mubarakahmad8936
      @mubarakahmad8936 Před 4 lety +3

      @@CheesyHotDogPuff Every great Driver has done that, if you were to look how a car reacts being pushed to the limit it slides but in a very suddle way. Even incredibly smooth drivers like Alain Prost did that if you were to look at his onboard like Estroil 1990 you could see the car slided a bit on most corners, every great Driver had just a different technique in achieving that hence why some Drivers slided the Car more than others but Gilles style is certainly very different because it defies all Physical limitations of a Driver reacting to a slide & the Car being able to carry the slide so perfectly. As Jackie Stewart once said about him:
      His Car control was EXTRAORDINARY, he could push a Grand Prix car to its ultimate limit.
      And yes I do agree with you. :)

    • @AdityaSingh-pg9iy
      @AdityaSingh-pg9iy Před 4 lety +4

      @@Driver61 Also please make a video on Mika Hakkinen, Lewis Hamilton, Fernando Alonso, Sebastian Vettel.

  • @tommasobianchi4350
    @tommasobianchi4350 Před 3 lety

    your videos are among the most interesting about F1, thank you very much, one of the best subscriptions I could do.

  • @justinvinsend7595
    @justinvinsend7595 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the great input !!

  • @runswithbears3517
    @runswithbears3517 Před 4 lety +25

    What a fantastic video! Love the insights. Schumacher was truly a great driver and a great man. To me, he is the GOAT!

  • @barbagiggia
    @barbagiggia Před 4 lety +8

    Sensibility is the key. Schumy was a "gently beast" driver. No one can match his sensibility for the limit. He could feel the speed and car equilibrium better than anyone else.

    • @kristoffer3000
      @kristoffer3000 Před rokem +1

      Would you say he was a 'gentle beast' when he crashed into competitors to take them out of the race so he would win titles?

  • @Rose_Butterfly98
    @Rose_Butterfly98 Před 3 lety +1

    I remember some journalist got to sit in a car driven by Schumacher , it was a demo run with their new car , I forgot who it was or what car it was but I remember the journalist write that it was scary how precise Schumacher was, there were markers to show where the perfect line was for drivers who were there to test the car. Schumacher hit everyone perfectly on both laps way faster than the guy thought was safe. On the second lap Schumacher said it was a fun lap and drifted the car a little, but once again hitting every marker perfectly.

  • @chanchaniceman
    @chanchaniceman Před 3 lety

    Videos like these really make the fans appreciate the skills that these drivers have... love to see you making analysis of Sebastian Vettel or Kimi Raikkonen especially in his prime to his latter days especially in the V6 era

  • @tomfallon6257
    @tomfallon6257 Před 4 lety +3

    The amount of kerb Schumacher took in that chicane is probably why the steering wheel is shaking so much

  • @kraM1t
    @kraM1t Před 4 lety +13

    I wish this video was longer

    • @orenbarnea2841
      @orenbarnea2841 Před 4 lety

      Same here, and I'm not a Schumacher fan, quite the opposite. Excellent video.

    • @harlyslamm2888
      @harlyslamm2888 Před 4 lety

      it was as long as Palmer's BBC analysis of Schumacher's driving style copied from the BBC 1995 British Grand Prix...

  • @mikem.s.1183
    @mikem.s.1183 Před 3 lety

    Brilliant analysis, as usual.
    Phenomenal insight in regards to the band of grip.

  • @georgeclark4229
    @georgeclark4229 Před 2 lety +2

    Shumy used the 4 wheel drift to set the chassis for fast exits like few drivers have. Often an instantaneous act that while almost impreceptible made his a championship style.

  • @CTU002
    @CTU002 Před 3 lety +6

    This proves Schumacher is the best we’ve ever seen on track, thanks for the video.

    • @B..P..
      @B..P.. Před 3 lety

      Schumacher and lewis hamilton are not the greatest of all time
      We will never know who the best is .
      To find out who the greatest of all time is you would have to give all of them the same car and let them race each other.
      In formula 1 the cars do the majority of the work.
      czcams.com/video/sMvgRy0GeRQ/video.html

  • @Lewis360
    @Lewis360 Před 4 lety +5

    I love this series of videos, very fascinating.
    I'd love to see the current driver's with proper cars, pushing to the limit every lap, a lot are very fast but I reckon a lot won't be able to carry their speed all the time without mistakes.

  • @nissenherrera8559
    @nissenherrera8559 Před 3 lety

    These videos/analysis are extremely well done 👍

  • @ChucklesMcGee780
    @ChucklesMcGee780 Před 3 lety

    mate, excellent content. concise, informative and fun. earned my sub :D keep it up!