The Michael Schumacher Career/Injury/Recovery Thread | Page 87 | FerrariChat

The Michael Schumacher Career/Injury/Recovery Thread

Discussion in 'F1' started by NürScud, Dec 29, 2013.

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  1. NeuroBeaker

    NeuroBeaker Advising Moderator
    Moderator

    Oct 1, 2008
    40,173
    Huntsville, AL., USA
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    Andrew
    Please remember that this thread is the digital equivalent of someone's hospital bed. If you were in such an environment, you would instinctively set a respectful level of decorum and refrain from employing profanity to sustain your side of a debate.

    For other threads, feel free to swear and rely upon the profanity filter (never bypass it), but in this particular one let's please show our respect for both a sporting hero and one another by finding tactful and gracious ways to express ourselves.

    Thread re-opened.

    Sincerely,
    Andrew.
     
  2. Peloton25

    Peloton25 F1 Veteran

    Jan 24, 2004
    7,646
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    Erik
  3. Drive550PFB

    Drive550PFB Two Time F1 World Champ
    Silver Subscribed

    Guys, in the spirit of wishing the best for Schuey, let me say this . . . this thread is about MS, and our disagreements here are small potatoes compared to the battle he is having right now. Neuro has provided that prospective. Well done.

    Get well, Michael.
     
  4. VIZSLA

    VIZSLA Four Time F1 World Champ
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    Jan 11, 2008
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    Amen.
     
  5. Napolis

    Napolis Three Time F1 World Champ
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    Oct 23, 2002
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    Jim Glickenhaus
  6. It's Ross

    It's Ross Formula 3

    Jul 30, 2007
    2,028
    Barrington, Ill. USA
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    Ross
    If what these experiments suggest is true, " That said, brain scans show that some of these people have an inner life...".
    It is indeed a terrifying and heartbreaking prospect.
     
  7. kraftwerk

    kraftwerk Two Time F1 World Champ

    May 12, 2007
    26,826
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    Steve
    Having looked again at the rocky area MS skied over and as being a pretty good skier myself, I would have probably given it a wide berth, now the reasons for this are :

    1. depending on the time of day and how tired I was.
    2. snow conditions apparently not too good.
    3. show boating does not appeal to me now, as I am older and a bit wiser.
    4. see no point in risking something I know I can do.

    However on another day being pestered by my younger brother or nut case friends to follow them, yes I probably would go through it no problem, especially if I knew the area and done it many times before, as I assume MS had.

    I maintain MS has just gotten really unlucky with his sequence of falling and hitting his head in a manner to sustain the injuries he has.

    I suppose it is a lesson to us all, I really hope he can recover to the point that he will be happy with.

    Hang on in there tough guy.

    Oh and BTW thanks NeuroB for cooling things.
     
  8. Remy Zero

    Remy Zero Two Time F1 World Champ

    Apr 26, 2005
    23,478
    KL, Malaysia
    Full Name:
    MC Cool Breeze
    As I type, the once dominant, all-conquering Michael Schumacher lay on a French hospital bed in an induced coma – words that some 36 hours after his life-threatening skiing accident still seem difficult to believe.

    At first the details of the off-piste incident were sketchy at best; first just a bump on the head, now, for Schumacher, an injury more life-threatening than any sustained at the wheel of a racing car.

    At this time of hope and prayers for the life an inspirational sporting megastar, the story that follows is perhaps more relevant than ever before. For all the success and controversy, Michael Schumacher has always been a decent human being – no other sport star donated nearly as much as Schumacher to the Boxing Day Tsunami victims in 2004, for example.

    The term ‘legend’ is used far too frequently and I feel it’s beginning to lose its worth as a result – perhaps befitting an age when winning a bicycle race or tennis match will earn you a knighthood – but with 7 World Championships and 91 Grand Prix victories, how can Michael Schumacher be described as anything less.

    Statistics alone don’t prove greatness but when the figures include those 7 World Championships and 91 race victories, it is hard to ignore them. However, for some, Michael will be remembered as the ‘Red Baron’, the villain who swerved into Damon Hill at Adelaide 1994, purposefully crashed into Jacques Villeneuve at Jerez ’97 and parked his Ferrari at Monaco 2006 in an unsporting gesture to his competitors. But whilst reading the following tale – one that goes against the grain for any blogger, words written not by myself but the great journalist and author Gerald Donaldson – think not of the Red Baron, but of Michael, the fundamentally decent human being fighting for his life on that French hospital bed…

    Michael is a nine-year-old Canadian boy with a lively mind in a
    body severely crippled body by an incurable muscular disease. He
    can’t walk and is confined to a wheelchair, nor can he speak
    properly, though his loving family understands him. Yet Michael’s
    handicap is no barrier when it comes to accommodating his main
    passion in life: F1 racing in general and one driver in
    particular.

    At home in Toronto Michael spends most of his time in a bedroom
    that is a shrine to his favourite driver. The wall facing the bed
    is dominated by a hand-painted mural of a life-size car driven by
    Michael’s hero, whose image is also depicted all around the room
    in photos, posters, banners and other regalia. His parents and
    younger brother decorated the room for him, but his father, a
    construction worker, said Michael was the foreman on the job. On
    Grand Prix Sundays, long before the race begins on television,
    the family dresses Michael in a sweater and cap in the colours of
    the driver who means the world to him.

    Michael’s mother, who works as a secretary, arranges family life
    around her son’s special needs and also tries to brighten his
    life with special occasions. On one occasion, after saving up for
    some time, the family was able to afford a journey to the
    Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal, where the goal was for Michael
    to meet his hero. Each day, in the morning and evening, they
    stood patiently outside the entrance to the paddock, with Michael
    fairly bouncing in his wheelchair, thrilled at the prospect of a
    meeting that unfortunately did not take place. Though other
    drivers came and went, the one they were waiting for never
    appeared and the family went home disappointed.

    But his mother, determined to make Michael’s dream come true,
    persevered. She found out his hero used another entrance to the
    paddock in Montreal. She was also told that famous F1 drivers are
    besieged with so many requests and their time is so limited that
    no matter how worthwhile the cause might be, their ability to
    make individual dreams come true is very limited. Nevertheless,
    Michael’s mother remained convinced that her son was a special
    case, and that his hero would recognize this when he saw him. And
    so the family returned to Montreal again, and early on the
    morning of opening day they were waiting outside the paddock. But
    so was a jostling, boisterous crowd of celebrity seekers and
    autograph hunters, few of whom paid any attention to the small
    family group – the anxious mother and father and two young boys,
    one of them sitting twisted and contorted in a wheelchair.

    Suddenly, the crowd became noisier and someone shouted that a
    famous driver was arriving on the back of a scooter. The driver
    jumped off and ran for the paddock turnstiles, followed by his
    flustered personal assistant who said he was late for a meeting
    with his engineers and had no time to stop. But he did stop, this
    famous driver, and he pushed his way through the now silent crowd
    of on-lookers and went directly to the family with the little boy
    in the wheelchair.

    Michael’s parents stood speechless and immobilized, unable to
    come to grips with the fact that this famous driver had actually
    singled them out for his individual attention. The driver quickly
    took charge of the situation. He shook hands with both parents,
    asked them for a pen to sign his name on their boys’ caps and
    told them to take photos. Then he got down on one knee and put
    his arm around little Michael in the wheelchair. He hugged him
    closer and whispered in his ear: “Hi, your Mom and Dad tell me we
    have the same name. Mine is Michael Schumacher and I am very
    happy to meet you.”

    (Photo taken by Mary, little Michael's mother)
    (Photo taken by Mary, little Michael’s mother)
    A man of Michael Schumacher’s decency and undoubted legend deserves to die an old man, having regaled tales of his successes to his Grandchildren and bore witness to the generations of racing stars he has inspired. The man who once mastered a Formula One car - mastered Formula One - cannot be felled by a mere ski. I, along with the rest of the world, wish him the speediest of recoveries.


    MICHAEL SCHUMACHER | Venn Motor Sport
    http://vennmotorsport.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/schumi3.jpg
     
  9. honeyberry

    honeyberry Karting

    Jan 31, 2014
    52
    Thank you so much for sharing this, I got very emotional while reading it and seeing the photo, Michael has to come through this with at least a good recovery where he knows his family and so that they can enjoy the rest of their lives together, I am not very good at putting things that I really feel into words so I hope you can understand what I am trying to say. I also along with the rest of the world wish him the speediest of recoveries.
     
  10. texasmr2

    texasmr2 Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Oct 22, 2007
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    +1M
     
  11. ross

    ross Three Time F1 World Champ
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    I don't know if this has been raised already but rumor going around here that schumi had a gopro on his helmet and that it is this piece if equipment that caused the helmet to break, and it then either focused the impact or pierced the skull. Anybody heard this?
     
  12. of2worlds

    of2worlds F1 World Champ
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    Beautiful moment in time! Thank you Remy Zero.
     
  13. 4rePhill

    4rePhill F1 Veteran

    Oct 18, 2009
    8,269
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    Phill J
    It's been mentioned already on here, and the thought from the people who were looking into it was that the camera may have caused the helmet to split.

    They couldn't say it was the definitive cause, but said it was highly possible.
     
  14. Bas

    Bas Four Time F1 World Champ

    Mar 24, 2008
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    It was investigated and came to the conclusion the GoPro had nothing to do with it.
     
  15. 4rePhill

    4rePhill F1 Veteran

    Oct 18, 2009
    8,269
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    Phill J
    Someone should tell Schuey that Massa and Bottas went fastest in the Bahrain test! - That should shock him into waking up!



    + Another 1M

    It's yet another of many tales that highlight the fact that, not only was Schuey an outstanding racing driver, but he is also an outstanding Human Being! :)
     
  16. Strictly Ferrari

    Strictly Ferrari Formula Junior
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  17. Remy Zero

    Remy Zero Two Time F1 World Champ

    Apr 26, 2005
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    MC Cool Breeze
    Just sharing. We need to stay together, and pray together for our champion's recovery. Tempers flare, opinion differs, but we're all here posting and updating each other based on one objective : to see our hero get through this! Forza Michael!
     
  18. texasmr2

    texasmr2 Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Very well said sir!!
     
  19. carguy

    carguy F1 Rookie

    Oct 30, 2002
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    Absolutely. This thread has developed into a "Schumacher Support Group" and despite our human failings being glaringly apparent - we need to keep in mind the greater goal....and that is to wish-hope-and pray that Michael gets through this ordeal.
     
  20. TheMayor

    TheMayor Ten Time F1 World Champ
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  21. VisualHomage

    VisualHomage F1 Veteran

    Aug 30, 2006
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    San Antonio
    Well-stated. Despite our differences we have come together under a common purpose and we can channel our energies, ultimately, into visioning a recovered Michael. What we envision in general tends to become what we experience. Let's give Michael the vision of the experience of a normal life again.
     
  22. crinoid

    crinoid F1 World Champ
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  23. Neonzapper

    Neonzapper F1 Rookie

    Oct 19, 2008
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    When he does pull through, it wouldn't be the first time someone defied an expert doctor's opinion. It happens all the time. The doctor said, "S/he will never be able to (fill in the blank)", but...
     
  24. VIZSLA

    VIZSLA Four Time F1 World Champ
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    Jan 11, 2008
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    Last I heard his docs hadn't said that.
    Other "experts", but not his.
     
  25. Andrew D.

    Andrew D. F1 Rookie

    Jul 6, 2008
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