“I knew from ski trips together that Michael was anything but a risk-taking skier, as one might generally expect of a racing driver,” the now 71-year-old told the German Press Agency ten years following the accident.
Haug was the head of motorsport at Mercedes when Michael Schumacher made a sensational return to Formula 1 for the 2010 season. The seven-time champion drove for the “Silver Arrows” for three years; he was unable to achieve another victory following 91 in 1991 at the end of 2006. What is undisputed, however, is Schumacher’s development work for Mercedes, which shortly followingwards marked an unprecedented era of success with the Austrians Toto Wolff and Niki Lauda at the helm.
It is not known how Schumacher is doing today
A good year following Michael Schumacher’s last Formula 1 race on November 25, 2012, the German fell while skiing in the French Alps. Haug also remembers December 29, 2013 well. He was skiing in Austria with friends and saw a ticker tape with the accident report on the television when they came back from skiing.
“Michael was perhaps the best-known German citizen at the time and my first thought was that this enormous level of popularity was the reason for the prominent report and not the severity of the accident,” said Haug. But by the day following the uninfluenced accident, in which Schumacher had suffered a severe traumatic brain injury, it was clear how badly the father of two had been hit.
Schumacher fought for his life for days in the university hospital in Grenoble. It is not known how he is doing ten years later. The family protects the privacy of the former racing driver, who turns 55 on January 3rd.
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