Mick Schumacher hails F1 safety technology after high-speed crash at Saudi Arabian Grand Prix
Schumacher hit the wall with a force of 33G as he pushed to try and make the top 10 in qualifying
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Mick Schumacher has hailed the safety technology in Formula One cars after coming through a high-speed crash unscathed at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
Schumacher hit the wall with a force of 33G as he pushed to try and make the top 10 in qualifying. The 23-year-old was airlifted to a hospital for further examination before returning to his hotel.
Haas F1 ruled Schumacher out of the race on Sunday and the American team said it would field just one car.
“Feeling all right,” Schumacher said on his return to the paddock on Sunday. “To be able to stand here with nothing, not even sore, just shows the security of these cars.
“Obviously you think about what could I have done better, what could I have done different? But in the end it’s also something that you have to move on from. Our goal is still Q3 and points and I guess we’ll have to delay that until [the next race in] Melbourne now.”
Schumacher is the son of seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher, and the Haas team said the young driver was able to phone his mother following the crash. It took safety workers several minutes to get Schumacher from his mangled car and into an ambulance for a first cursory check at the track.
F1 has been heavily scrutinised for continuing its race weekend following an attack by rebels on a nearby oil depot. The attack during the first practice Friday could be heard at the track and smoke could be seen billowing in the background of the circuit.
Drivers met several times on Friday for more than four hours discussing safety concerns and whether or not they should compete. F1 and the FIA, the ruling body for the series, assured the competitors that safety measures were in place.
So the action went on as scheduled Saturday until Schumacher’s crash in the second segment of qualifying. It created a lengthy stoppage for cleanup and pole-sitter Sergio Perez of Red Bull said after the Saudi Arabian circuit is “definitely the most dangerous place in the calendar. That’s no secret about it.”
“It’s a circuit that really demands a lot from the drivers, from the cars, from the teams. If you get it wrong, it can be a huge accident,” Perez said. “The last thing I want to think is about the track, and I think going forwards it’s again a discussion.”
Sunday will mark the second time in three F1 races that Haas has been down to just one car. Nikita Mazepin missed the season finale last year when he tested positive for Covid-19 the morning of the race. Mazepin has been replaced this year by Kevin Magnussen, who will start 10th on Sunday.
Haas reserve driver Pietro Fittipaldi is in Saudi Arabia but, just as was the case in Abu Dhabi last December when Mazepin was ruled out, he was not eligible to get in the car so late in the race weekend.
Additional reporting by AP
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