View Single Post
Old 08-08-2009, 12:14 PM   #1 (permalink)
kimiiceman
 
kimiiceman's Avatar

Points: 3,203, Level: 37
Points: 3,203, Level: 37 Points: 3,203, Level: 37 Points: 3,203, Level: 37
Level up: 2%, 147 Pt needed
Level up: 2% Level up: 2% Level up: 2%
Activity: 99.0%
Activity: 99.0% Activity: 99.0% Activity: 99.0%
Award-Showcase
 
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: India
Posts: 523
kimiiceman is on a distinguished road
Send a message via MSN to kimiiceman Send a message via Yahoo to kimiiceman
Default Lauda: Schumi regretted retiring

Niki Lauda feels Michael Schumacher will be looking on his return to Formula One as "nothing more than an interesting experiment".

Lauda knows what it takes to make a comeback as he spent three years in retirement before hitting the track again in 1982.

The Austrian won the third grand prix of that season, and went on to claim the third of his world titles in 1984.

Yet whilst Lauda returned for the long haul, he is confident that is far from the aim of Schumacher, who replaces the injured Felipe Massa at Ferrari, starting with the European Grand Prix in Valencia on August 23.

"He was never able to detox himself of the racing bug, as we have seen with his on-track motorcycle activities," said Lauda, speaking to the official Formula One website.

"In my opinion he retired at the end of the 2006 season because he couldn't see a real challenge - and probably he regretted his decision.

"Now he's got the unique chance to step in for the injured Massa to help his former team, and to find out for himself how competitive he still is.

"This is something that would also interest me, because this hunger for competition - for the adrenalin rush - never dies. It's in our DNA.

"And the situation as it is now at Ferrari, with a recovering Massa and an available ****pit, gives him the chance to explore how far he is off the top.

"That is a question that always puzzles a top driver like he was.

"For Michael it's nothing more than an interesting experiment."

Although now 40, Schumacher proved his fitness by completing a full day of testing in a 2007 Ferrari a week ago.

The only concern for the seven-times World Champion is whether his neck, injured in a bike accident in Spain in February, can withstand the rigours of a full grand prix weekend.

That will be determined next week when Schumacher undergoes tests, with 60-year-old Lauda adding: "Forget about the age.

"He is fit, he's undergoing rigorous training, and mentally he is taking up the challenge.

"He will do everything possible to be fit as a fiddle in Valencia.

"Basically, he has to focus mainly on the muscles that are called on in an F1 car and, of course, the neck.

"But that should be manageable in the next two weeks. In the end the final word will be with the doctors, to decide whether he is in the physical state to race.

"There are some (other) obstacles that he has to overcome, like his unfamiliarity with the track and that he's had no chance to test this year's car.

"But that's part of his challenge and that's why he's doing it, and why the whole world will be watching."

As far as Lauda is concerned, though, the return will be a fleeting one because when asked how long the guest appearance will last, he replied: "Only as long as Massa is in recovery. Period."

Lauda: Schumi regretted retiring - Planet-F1 News - from planet-f1.com
kimiiceman is offline   Reply With Quote