Villeneuve highlights why no F1 team wants to sign Schumacher
Villeneuve highlights why no F1 team wants to sign Schumacher
F1 champion Jacques Villeneuve believes any team that hires Mick Schumacher wants the image that comes with his name and will be hoping he is "better than he was at Haas."
Jacques Villeneuve feels that signing Mick Schumacher would
constitute a risk for teams as they would be "hoping" he has
improved since his Haas tenure. The Canadian highlighted that
despite Schumacher and his team's best efforts, "no one seems to be
jumping to get him on their team". After being released by Haas at
the end of 2022, the German driver has dovetailed roles at Mercedes
and Alpine. Having immediately moved into a reserve and development
driver role with the former, Schumacher also became part of the
latter's endurance programme for the 2024 season, which saw him
compete in the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Despite two years on the F1
sidelines, the 25-year-old has maintained his goal is a return to a
full-time race seat in the championship, and is in the running for
the second seat at Alpine, alongside Pierre Gasly. However, Jack
Doohan is believed to be the front-runner for the drive. For
Villeneuve, the root of the issue is Schumacher's time in F1, as
the "evidence is there for everyone to see", according to the 1997
drivers' champion. “It doesn’t seem like any team wants Mick
Schumacher to drive for them," the 53-year-old told
Instantcasino.com. " The push has been made by Mick and his team,
but no one seems to be jumping to get him on their team. "The
problem is his years in F1 didn’t conclude in a positive way, he
might be doing better and showing promise in the position he’s in,
but the evidence is there for everyone to see. "For teams, it’s
worrisome, do they want to take the risk of hoping Mick is better
than he was? It doesn’t look like it at the moment." 'It's because
they want the Schumacher image...' Schumacher endured a difficult
two-year stint with Haas before being replaced after the 2022 F1
season by countryman Nico Hulkenberg. The American squad produced
the only car not capable of scoring points in his rookie campaign,
but he handily beat team-mate Nikita Mazepin. The following season,
Schumacher found himself up against Haas veteran Kevin Magnussen.
In addition to being overmatched by the Dane, he had a series of
high-profile and costly crashes, something that also plagued him
the year before. Magnussen took points in nine races, including all
three sprints, to Schumacher's two. In doing so, he outscored the
German 25 points to 12. Despite remaining popular with F1 fans, and
some within the paddock, such as Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff
and former FIA president Jean Todt, arguing Schumacher is worthy of
a second chance in F1, Villeneuve believes that his main draw is
his name after his father's decorated career. “If a team does
employ Mick as an F1 driver, it’s because they want the Schumacher
image and it’s in hope he’s better than he was at Haas," he said.
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