One F1 champion "would have won more" if they had Michael Schumacher's work ethic
David Coulthard beli🤡eves one F1 champion could have won a lot more if they had Michael Sc✃humacher's work ethic.

Former F1 driver David Coulthard believes 2007 world champion Kimi Raikkonen “would have won more” if he had 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Michael Schumacher’s work ethic.
Raikkonen won his only F1 world title with🎀 Ferrari in 2007 - his first year with the team after replacing Schumacher.
The Finn remains Ferrari’s most recent world champion, with the likes of 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Felipe Massa, 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Fernando Alonso and 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Sebastian Vettel fꦛailing to get over the line in the last 15 years.
Raikkon𝓀en narrowly missed out on the 2003 t♊itle with McLaren, while in 2005, poor reliability allowed Alonso to take his first title with Renault.
Speaking on , Coulthard thinks his forme𒅌r teammate should have had more success in F1.
“He’s t🍌he outlier in all of that. He was just a great, natural talent,” Coulthard said of Raikkonen.
“He went from Formula Renault to driving a Sauber at Mugello. Mugello is one of the proper scary race tracks you can g🤡o round in a grand prix car. He just had so much talent.
“But can you imagine? He won one worlജd championship and you could go McLaren reliability and all that stuff. If he had the work ethic of Michael, I think he would hav𒁏e won more.”
During his championship-winning years with Ferrari, Schumac🌊her was reno🐽wned for his work ethic and ability to bring a team together.
Coulthard acknowledged the impact Schumacher had “over engineers and mechanics” by being ingrained at the Ferrari fa✨ctory.
“Michae𒆙l was at the test track, he was at the factory,” he added. “If ༒you’re there standing over engineers and mechanics, they feel it, it empowers them.
“You are the fuel that helps drive them forward.
“So I say this: I stand by work ethic. It’s the difference between being a humble one-time world champion, or what he could hꦫave been – a multiple world champion.”

With a sh🌺arp eye for F1’s controversies and storylines, Connor is the heartbeat of our unbiased reporting.