Home Sport F1 makes an exception for Mick Schumacher, allows MSC back on timing...

F1 makes an exception for Mick Schumacher, allows MSC back on timing screens

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F1 great Michael Schumacher first took the abbreviation to set himself apart from his younger brother, but now his son Mick has his own justification.

Haas F1 driver Mick Schumacher. File picture: Stephanie Lecocq, Pool photo via AP

Alan Baldwin, in LONDON – The letters MSC on a Formula One timing screen once charted the dominance of seven-times world champion Michael Schumacher but this season they denote the presence on track of his son Mick.

The Ferrari great first took the abbreviation to set himself apart from younger brother Ralf on screens that display the first three letters of a surname, but Mick has his own justification.

After winning the 2020 Formula Two title accompanied by the letters SCH, the third Schumacher to enter the sport asked Formula One – now headed by ex-Ferrari boss Stefano Domenicali – to make a change.

“I wanted that MSC,” the 21-year-old Haas driver told reporters during pre-season testing in Bahrain ahead of his F1 race debut there on March 28.

“It’s an emotional bond I have to it.

“I think it’s quite nice for everybody watching the timing screens and seeing MSC back on the screens as well. I think there’s a positive to it.”

There will be those who expect the famous name to bring its own magic but Mick has shown through the junior series that he is well-grounded.

For him, taking the Schumacher name back onto the starting grid is a source of pride more than pressure.

“I’m very happy to carry that surname, and I’m very happy to carry that name back into Formula One, and I’m very proud of it,” the Swiss-born German said at the launch of his team’s new Ferrari-powered car.

“It’s like a boost for me and it gives me motivation every single day.”

Schumacher senior, who has not been seen in public since he suffered severe head injuries in a 2013 skiing accident, made an instant impression when he qualified seventh on his Formula One debut with Jordan in Belgium 30 years ago.

He was snapped up for the next race by rival Benetton, with whom he won a race in his second season and then championships in 1994 and 1995 before five in a row with Ferrari between 2000 to 2004.

Mick can expect a less dramatic debut with a US-owned team that scored only three points last year and which has already made clear that their main focus is on preparing for 2022 when new rules come into play.

The German’s enthusiasm, even when the prospect of a possible year without points is raised, is undimmed.

“I do feel ready, I would go racing tomorrow if it were up to me,” he said.

“I cannot tell what is going to happen this season but I know that I will do everything in my toolbox … to hopefully get some points.”

Reuters

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