Schumacher: I'll fight to the end
Michael Schumacher has vowed to fight to the bitter end despite the latest cruel blow to his fading world championship dream.
In the final race of his Formula One career on Sunday, Schumacher will start the Brazilian Grand Prix from 10th on the grid after his Ferrari sustained a fuel pressure problem.
Schumacher had earlier looked dominant, in particular when setting the fastest time of the second session at the Interlagos circuit of one minute 10.313 seconds, just more than 0.3secs faster than the record pole time set by Rubens Barrichello in 2004.
But on his initial outlap in the final 20-minute session, the 37-year-oldâs Ferrari started to tour around the 4.3km circuit before eventually labouring back into the garage.
Despite the Ferrari mechanics working furiously on the car, they were unable to return the seven-times world champion to the track.
That must surely signal the end of Schumacherâs hopes of heading into retirement with an eighth world title to his name.
After an engine failure in the last race in Japan robbed him of victory, Schumacher has long insisted the driversâ title was not on his agenda, with his goal to help Ferrari win the constructorsâ championship.
With Ferrari trailing Renault by nine points, that is now in doubt to Schumacherâs grave disappointment, but he said: âI can only try to fight, I will fight and then we will see what happens.
âI have no clue as to how the race will develop. Itâs hard for me to predict something. All I can do is achieve the maximum out of this situation.â
This was not what Schumacher had planned, though, as he revealed: âAfter the technical failure in Suzuka and the one here, Iâm not happy about this.
âBut itâs a prototype car and you can never rule out these things. Every so often something has to happen. Itâs just a shame it has happened to me twice in a row.
âThere is still a long race, and I donât know what will happen. It is hard to say.â
Schumacher reiterated: âI have said before that Iâve not been thinking about the driversâ title.
âIâve been looking to fight for the constructorsâ championship, to get as many points as I can for that.
âMaybe itâs still not over. We just have to continue to fight and then see what happens.â
When asked whether he could still win, he jokingly replied: âIf I can pass all of them then I can win â itâs an easy calculation!â
Unsurprisingly, reigning world champion Fernando Alonso is still refusing to dismiss Schumacher, particularly with the Ferrari the quickest car at present.
Alonso, who requires one point to be crowned champion again and become only the eighth driver in Formula One history to achieve the back-to-back feat, will start from fourth.
âThe target was to be in the top five, so I am very happy,â said the 25-year-old Renault driver.
âStarting from the second row is perfect for our approach this weekend, and so far everything is going to plan.
âObviously, the problem Michael had has helped us, not just me, but the team as well in the constructorsâ championship. We will take anything we can get.
âSo things are looking better for us, but we cannot write Michael off and it doesnât change my approach.
âTomorrow my aim will be to get a good start and fight at the front. We know the car has the pace to do it.â
Schumacherâs Ferrari team-mate Felipe Massa will start on pole for the third time in his last five races, with the McLaren of Kimi Raikkonen joining him on the front row.
Jarno Trulli qualified third for Toyota for his highest placing of the year, and then behind Alonso came Rubens Barrichello in his Honda, the second Renault of Giancarlo Fisichella and the second Toyota of Ralf Schumacher.




