$9 4 million That s how much you need to lay your hands on Michael Schumacher s 2003 F1 title winning Ferrari
$9 4 million - That s how much you need to lay your hands on Michael Schumacher s 2003 F1 title-winning Ferrari Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Approve Reject & ban Delete Logout
On several occasions in the past I’ve talked about the similarities between him & Michael Schumacher at his peak.
This metronomic consistency is another illustration of the way they use their intelligence & feel to manage a race Absolutely staggering consistency and as good a clue as you’ll find to why is so hard to beat. He’s not just as quick as anyone else out there, he’s that quick on every single lap. Apart from when he’s in the pits. Obvs.Absolutely staggering consistency and as good a clue as you’ll find to why is so hard to beat. He’s not just as quick as anyone else out there, he’s that quick on every single lap. Apart from when he’s in the pits. Obvs. This is extraordinary from On several occasions in the past I’ve talked about the similarities between him & Michael Schumacher at his peak.This metronomic consistency is another illustration of the way they use their intelligence & feel to manage a race The most expensive F1 car ever sold was the 1954 Mercedes W196R. That was Juan Manuel Fangio's car when he won the second of his five World titles. It was purchased for $29,650,095 at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in 2013.
$9 4 million - That s how much you need to lay your hands on Michael Schumacher s 2003 F1 title-winning Ferrari
Michael Schumacher's 2003 title-winning Ferrari is up for auction. Michael Schumacher's 2003 F1 World Championship-winning Ferrari is set to go on auction and could fetch a whopping $9.4 million. The seven-time world champion drove the F2003-GA Chassis 229 to seven race victories during the 2003 season, when he won his sixth world title. The car was also one of the four Schumacher-era Ferrari F1 chassis with seven or more wins in a world championship-winning season. Michael Schumacher, will be forever superior.Michael Schumacher, will be forever superior. The car will go up for auction in Geneva, Switzerland, the same country where the Schumacher family has been residing since 2007. According to the Sotheby's Auction House, which is in charge of the auction of the car, the Ferrari could fetch up to $9.4 million. Vincent Luzuy, the executive assistant to the director of RM Sotheby’s sales, expressed pride in being able to auction the car, : “It’s special because this car is one of the only four cars with more than four wins in the Ferrari history and especially with one of the most skilled driver of his generation, Michael Schumacher.” Luzuy also added the car is 'track-ready; should the buyer wish to give their new purchase (one of the best machines of its time) a spin. If the car meets its estimated auction price, it will become the second-most expensive F1 car sold at the auction. It would rank behind another Michael Schumacher car — the 2001 title winning Ferrari F2001 — which fetched $7.5 million at a Sotheby's auction in New York. This is extraordinary fromOn several occasions in the past I’ve talked about the similarities between him & Michael Schumacher at his peak.
This metronomic consistency is another illustration of the way they use their intelligence & feel to manage a race Absolutely staggering consistency and as good a clue as you’ll find to why is so hard to beat. He’s not just as quick as anyone else out there, he’s that quick on every single lap. Apart from when he’s in the pits. Obvs.Absolutely staggering consistency and as good a clue as you’ll find to why is so hard to beat. He’s not just as quick as anyone else out there, he’s that quick on every single lap. Apart from when he’s in the pits. Obvs. This is extraordinary from On several occasions in the past I’ve talked about the similarities between him & Michael Schumacher at his peak.This metronomic consistency is another illustration of the way they use their intelligence & feel to manage a race The most expensive F1 car ever sold was the 1954 Mercedes W196R. That was Juan Manuel Fangio's car when he won the second of his five World titles. It was purchased for $29,650,095 at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in 2013.