Mick Schumacher finishes eighth on F2 debut in Bahrain to seal sprint race pole position
Son of seven-time F1 champion gave a solid debut driver as he fought back through the field from starting in 10th to claim points and take pole position for Sunday’s reverse grid sprint race
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Your support makes all the difference.Mick Schumacher made an assured Formula Two debut for the Prema Racing team, finishing eighth in Saturday's race in Bahrain after qualifying in 10th place.
The 20-year-old son of F1 great Michael Schumacher had a confident start, jumping up one place. He drifted down the field before climbing back into ninth place, and then clawed back nearly two seconds before making a smart overtake inside Japanese driver Nobuharu Matsushita on the final lap.
The German driver finished about 35 seconds behind winner Nicholas Latifi of Canada.
Finishing eighth means Schumacher starts from pole position in Sunday's F2 race — where grid positions are reversed — giving him a decent chance of a podium finish or even victory.
The spotlight increases further when he makes his F1 testing debut with Ferrari at the Bahrain desert circuit on Tuesday. Schumacher is part of Ferrari's driver academy, as was the 21-year-old Charles Leclerc — who is now racing for Ferrari after just one season with Alfa Romeo Sauber in F1 last year.
Schumacher's famed father won five of his record seven F1 titles with Ferrari from 2000-04. The 50-year-old Schumacher also holds the F1 record for most wins with 91.
They were skiing together in December 2013 when his father fell and hit the right side of his head on a rock, splitting open the helmet.
Doctors worked to remove blood clots from his brain, but some were left because they were too deeply embedded. Schumacher's condition stabilised after he was placed in a drug-induced coma, from which he later emerged. But updates on his health have been scarce since he left the hospital in September 2014 to be cared for privately at his Swiss home by Lake Geneva.
When the younger Schumacher won the F3 European Championship title last year, it fast-tracked him into F2 and prompted speculation he could be in F1 by 2020 if he shines this season.
Nico Rosberg's F1 title with Mercedes in 2016 made him only the second son of an F1 champion to become one, following father Keke Rosberg's triumph in 1982.
The others were Graham Hill ('62 and '68) and Damon Hill ('96).
The Villeneuves came close: with Gilles runner-up in '79 and his son Jacques crowned champion in '97.
The late Ayrton Senna won three F1 titles and the Brazilian is considered arguably the greatest F1 driver, along with Schumacher.
Senna's nephew Bruno Senna's modest F1 career lasted three seasons, with a best result of sixth when driving for Williams in 2012.
AP
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