Scottish Daily Mail

SCHUMACHER AT 50

Five years on from his life-changing accident, inside the hidden world of...

- by Jonathan McEvoy in Geneva

IT IS a bright winter’s day and next to nothing stirs outside the £50million mansion in which Michael Schumacher is hidden from the world.

December 29 will mark five years since the most successful Formula One driver in history, who will turn 50 five days later, fell and hit his head while skiing in Meribel, in the French Alps.

But Schumacher’s wife Corinna, whom he married in 1995, has insisted on secrecy over his condition, a request that has been faithfully observed by all around them. Friends don’t talk. If they do, they are no longer friends.

A few dog-walkers roam the quiet wooded paths outside the Schumacher house on the banks of Lake Geneva. Michael’s father Rolf, the former bricklayer who ran go-karts at their local Kerpen track close to Cologne to support his boy’s career, is one of them.

You can just hear golf balls pinging at the club next door, but none of the locals in Gland — a town of 13,000 situated between Geneva and Lausanne — knows the latest medical situation of the superstar who lives among them.

But Rolf, who visits Switzerlan­d regularly from home in Bonn, confirms that Michael is inside, scotching rumours that the world’s first billionair­e sportsman has been transferre­d to a £30m holiday home Corinna bought in Majorca this summer, or, at least for now, to a specialist brain trauma hospital in America.

Since the accident on a clear, sunny morning in Meribel at an ‘off-piste junction’, much has transpired in Formula One.

Lewis Hamilton has overtaken Schumacher’s pole record, 83 to 68. But the former Benetton, Ferrari and Mercedes great remains ahead on race wins (91 to 73) and world championsh­ips (seven to five).

Schumacher’s ardent fan Sebastian Vettel has moved to Ferrari but so far has failed to add to the fourth title he won in 2013. Vettel, incidental­ly, politely declined our enquiry as to whether he has visited his recuperati­ng hero — one private man acknowledg­ing the privacy of another.

Max Verstappen, who holidayed with the Schumacher­s as a boy, owing to his father Jos and Michael being contempora­ries and friends, has emerged as the next potential star of the track, even if his aggressive driving has courted controvers­y as Michael’s ruthlessne­ss once caused him to.

Most poignantly, Michael’s own son Mick, who was at his father’s side aged 14 when he hit that rock and suffered a brain haemorrhag­e, is the F3 champion and has signed to race for Prema in Formula Two, F1’s feeder series, next season. His future is promising, with seats at Mercedes or Ferrari a possibilit­y one day.

Mick, who is said to be as private as his father, never delivers medical bulletins to outsiders, but last month he told Germany’s RTL channel of his relationsh­ip with Michael before the accident.

‘My dad asked if I wanted to do racing profession­ally or whether we should just do it for fun, as a hobby. I, of course, said I wanted to do it profession­ally.

‘I always want to compare myself to the best, and my father is the best. He’s also my idol. I’m pleased if I can compare myself to him.

‘Many world champions compare themselves to my father. Even on days when the karting track was closed, we’d go there and we were allowed to do some laps. That was always the best time.’

But, in contrast to his son’s fastevolvi­ng career, Schumacher’s progress has, at best, been slow.

However, Sportsmail understand­s that he is not bed-ridden. Nor is he existing on tubes. Yet it is believed he is receiving extensive nursing and therapy care, which has been estimated to cost more than £50,000 a week.

He is, it can be revealed, living with his close family in the main body of his house rather than in an outbuildin­g that some reports suggested had been constructe­d in response to his injuries as a special medical facility, a sort of hospital at home. In fact, the building work began before the accident occurred and the new cottage was always intended as a base for his widower father when he stayed.

Apart from one comment in 2016 from Schumacher’s German lawyer, Felix Damm, confirming to a Hamburg court that the champion driver could ‘not walk’, further genuine updates have been hard to come by.

One leak was thwarted, with tragic consequenc­es, in 2014. It came after Schumacher was transporte­d from University of Grenoble Hospital, where he had two life-saving operations and remained for five months before coming out of his induced coma, to the University Hospital in Lausanne.

Some of his medical records were stolen and offered to media outlets for £40,000. The suspected

He is receiving extensive care costing £50,000 a week

Greatest gift is for fans to remember him as the best

thief, who worked for Rega, the air-rescue company that moved Schumacher, was arrested, only to be found hanged in his cell while awaiting interview.

‘We are at a loss for words and deeply shocked,’ said Sabine Kehm, loyal spokeswoma­n for the Schumacher family, at the time.

The following year, a photograph taken at his home and smuggled out by a ‘friend’ was being hawked around for £1m, in what German prosecutor­s described as a ‘violation of his personal range of life’ and a breach of privacy. The image never surfaced.

But we were recently given a glimpse inside Schumacher’s life, through the words of an archbishop, who is a confidant to two popes. Dr Georg Ganswein, Prefect of the Pontifical Household of Pope Francis and secretary of the retired Pope, Benedict XVI, was asked by Schumacher’s friend and former Ferrari team principal, now FIA president, Jean Todt, if he would visit Schumacher at home.

He did so in 2016. Speaking in the last few weeks to German newspaper Bild, Ganswein revealed: ‘I first talked to Corinna Schumacher and her mother. Then a therapist brought Michael Schumacher into the living room. I introduced myself and told him that I’m a secret fan, that I often watched his races, and that I was fascinated by how someone can steer such a machine through any weather at such high speed.

‘I greeted Michael and held his hands. They were warm. Some things words cannot transport, but a touch can. Holding the hand of a sick person is something deeply Christian that provides consolatio­n and closeness. That was important to me.’

Todt is a regular visitor, too, but is careful never to disclose Michael’s condition. He confirmed, however, that they had watched last month’s Brazilian Grand Prix together at Schumacher’s house.

‘I have pictures of Michael in my offices and apartments,’ Todt has said often, sometimes close to tears. ‘He is like a son to me.’

Another of Schumacher’s old Ferrari team-mates, Rubens Barrichell­o, wanted to pay a visit, but was told: ‘It would not do him or me any good’. He said: ‘So I have no news, but we must respect the wishes of the family.’

But these insights are rare. Those close to Michael know precisely why Corinna, as is her right, asked for his confidenti­ality to be meticulous­ly observed by friends.

As Schumacher’s spokesman Kehm says: ‘Michael always drew a clear distinctio­n between his profession­al and personal lives, even during the most successful times of his career, and the family wants to honour that distinctio­n now.’

Moreover, pre-accident Schumacher possessed a sense of his own sporting prowess, of his athleticis­m, which he worked more profession­ally in the gym to cultivate than any racer before. He was a proud man, and nobody close to him now wishes his self-image, and that shared by his devoted fans, to be shattered by unpalatabl­e updates. So what next? The German magazine Bravo has reported that medics are preparing in the utmost secrecy for Schumacher’s transfer to a clinic in Dallas, Texas, specialisi­ng in the treatment of brain injuries.

Mark Weeks, the director, told the magazine crypticall­y: ‘We have a lot of experience with patients who are suffering this kind of trauma. There is probably no clinic in Europe that treats as many cases as we do.’

The Schumacher family will not comment on the speculatio­n.

But before any possible move, there comes Michael’s 50th birthday on January 3. Bar a change of tack, or a happy transforma­tion in his health, he will not be seen on the landmark day except by his closest friends and family.

His fans will curse the desperate irony that a man who lived his profession­al life so fast — and suffered only a single serious Formula One accident, breaking his leg at Silverston­e in 1999 — could have hurt himself this grievously in such seemingly innocuous circumstan­ces.

He was a fine skier and regularly won the downhill competitio­n at the annual Ferrari winter retreat at Madonna di Campiglio in the Italian Dolomites, where he would knock back Bacardi and Coke in celebratio­n.

And what a further cruel irony that Schumacher should have been a prominent supporter of the ICM, a brain and spine institute in Paris, long before his own accident, working energetica­lly for the cause.

The president of ICM is family friend Professor Gerard Saillant, the world-renowned neurologis­t, who flew to Schumacher’s bedside to help save his life on that fateful day nearly five years ago.

Schumacher, though, never craved sympathy. As he said in 2007: ‘I’ve always believed that you should never ever give up, and you should always keep fighting even when there’s only the slightest chance.’

That sentiment gave rise to the ‘Keep Fighting Initiative’, set up by spokeswoma­n Kehm and intended to ‘spread the positive energy that supporters of Michael have expressed to him over the years’, through good deeds, cultural and educationa­l. Indeed, trackside fans across the world still wave banners offering their support for the stricken Schumacher, their hopes undimmed.

Plans will soon be revealed for public recognitio­n of his half-century. But, before those ideas are made known, Kehm expressed this one heartfelt wish: ‘The best present for Michael and the family as he approaches his 50th birthday is for people to remember him as the best racer and record-breaker that he is.’

 ?? GETTY IMAGES AFP AFP ?? Golden couple: Schumacher and Corinna in 2012 Champion: Schumacher at a Ferrari skiing event and (above) his Lake Geneva home Formidable: Schumacher celebrates another win during his dominant years at Ferrari
GETTY IMAGES AFP AFP Golden couple: Schumacher and Corinna in 2012 Champion: Schumacher at a Ferrari skiing event and (above) his Lake Geneva home Formidable: Schumacher celebrates another win during his dominant years at Ferrari
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 ?? DDP/CAMERA PRESS ?? Private figure: Schumacher is only visited by family and close friends
DDP/CAMERA PRESS Private figure: Schumacher is only visited by family and close friends

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