Like
millions of other soccer fans, Michael watched the Euro 2004 final in the quiet
of his own home. This was the reason why the six-time champion left the
Magny-Cours autodrome immediately after the post-race briefing.
If the game had not taken place, Michael could have long celebrated his ninth
win of the season. Never before has a driver won a race after making four pit
stops and it is a feat that the German driver was especially pleased about.
‘I think that it is incredibly motivating to race for this team’, began Michael
with a huge smile on his face.
‘Everyone working perfectly in synch is unheard of. What I like about Ferrari is
not only the teamwork and the spirit that bonds us together.
'To this has to be added the creativity and adventurism in using unusual
methods. I believe that this works only because we have complete trust in each
other and it, undoubtedly, provides continual motivation’.
This is the reply
to the question that the drivers and team members are often asked; this is the
strength of the Ferrari team: ‘It’s precisely this that our motivation is based
on: everything is always new, always different. You always try to find and
realise ever more exciting challenges, new ways of reacting and new set ups.
This is why I like it so much’.
The French GP was
also dominated by the views of the outgoing President of the FIA, Max Mosley, on
the need to cut speeds in F1. ‘After the serious crashes involving Felipe Massa
and Ralf Schumacher, it is time to drastically reduce the speeds of the single-seaters’,
argued Mosley. Michael, as usual, preferred not to comment at the time and opted
to reflect with the necessary calm given that it is such a complex debate.
‘In my opinion, the speed of the cars is not a problem at the moment’, declared
the current F1 champion. ‘It could, potentially, become a problem and we drivers
could resolve it, above all if F1 is left to itself. There is the need to set
regulations that last, to slow the progress of technology so that we don’t reach
that danger zone in which accidents are no longer controllable, an eventuality
that could have ominous consequences. What happened to Ralf and Felipe was a
warning sign.
'As in other areas of life, in F1 something has to happen before regulatory
measures are put in place; it is this that we have to try to avoid’. Michael has
clear ideas on this: ‘Safety has to be prioritised and it should always come
before the spectacle’.
This does not mean that motor racing will lose its character: ‘I think that F1
should remain…Formula 1. Drastic measures are often rash ones and not thought
out long enough and in the long term they often lead in very different
directions to those originally intended’. |