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Most racing drivers dream of becoming the Formula 1 world champion with Ferrari one day. But very few manage to turn that dream into reality.

This year Lewis Hamilton aims to prove otherwise. His move from Mercedes to Ferrari ranks among the most significant transfers in F1 history because it connects the most successful driver (seven world titles) with the most successful team (15 drivers’ and 16 constructors’ championships).

But Hamilton is by no means the first world champion to make the switch to Maranello. Other title winners have also tried their luck in red – with varying degrees of success.

We take a look at the first grand prix weekend for each of those champions – and whether it foreshadowed a successful title campaign…

1956: Fangio takes a shared victory

Fangio and Ferrari wasn't a perfect match, even if they did win 1956 title together

Fangio and Ferrari wasn’t a perfect match, even if they did win 1956 title together

Photo by: LAT Photographic

Juan Manuel Fangio was already the most successful driver of Formula 1’s first decade when he moved to Ferrari for the 1956 season. He had already won titles in 1951 with Alfa Romeo, in 1954 with Maserati and Mercedes, and in 1955 with Mercedes.

It was a hallmark of Fangio’s career that he ruthlessly sought out the most competitive seats. But this marriage with Ferrari was born out of convenience rather than love, since Merc’s withdrawal from racing and Maserati’s shaky finances made Maranello his best option.

Fangio’s home race in Argentina was his first grand prix for Ferrari. But it didn’t go according to plan: a faulty fuel pump slowed him down, prompting him to take over team-mate Luigi Musso’s car on lap 30 of 98.

Musso had been running in fifth place before handing over. Fangio took off in pursuit of the leaders but overcooked it after passing Jean Behra’s Maserati, losing time to a spin.

Then, over the course of three laps as half-distance approached in the three-hour event, the frontrunners hit trouble. Fangio’s other team-mate Eugenio Castellotti suffered a gearbox failure, Carlos Menditeguy’s Maserati broke a driveshaft, and an ominous plume of smoke developed in the wake of Stirling Moss’s similar car.

Fangio overtook Behra again and made short work of Moss as his engine continued to tighten up. Since Fangio shared his car with Musso, they split the points for the victory. However, Fangio still left Argentina as the championship leader, thanks to an extra point for the fastest lap.

Mechanical trouble dogged Fangio throughout the season and neither did he get on with team manager Eraldo Sculati; he was only persuaded to remain at Ferrari when he was given a mechanic to tend his car exclusively. When a steering arm broke in the final round at Monza, and Musso refused to hand over his car, Fangio’s title hopes looked precarious until Peter Collins did the decent thing: three points for second place in the shared car was enough to stay ahead of Moss.

Fangio then moved to Maserati for 1957, where he secured his fifth and final title.

1990: Retirement sets the tone for Prost’s time at Ferrari

Prost's Ferrari career didn't get off to the best of starts in Phoenix

Prost’s Ferrari career didn’t get off to the best of starts in Phoenix

Photo by: Ercole Colombo

Alain Prost’s bitter rivalry with Ayrton Senna at McLaren meant something had to change. Even before Prost got the 1989 world championship over the line, he’d made arrangements to move to Ferrari – and infuriated McLaren boss Ron Dennis by dropping his trophy into the crowd after winning the Italian Grand Prix.

Prost therefore carried the number one on his Ferrari 641 for the 1990 season opener at the unloved Phoenix street circuit, where unexpected (and unusual for the Arizona desert) rain on Saturday meant the grid was set by times from Friday – this being an era before qualifying was consolidated into one TV-friendly session. That meant Prost started seventh with team-mate Nigel Mansell 17th.

Gearbox issues dropped Prost to ninth at the start. He fought back to fourth by lap 17 but just four laps later his gearbox gave up completely – a less spectacular retirement than Mansell, who spun out with his engine aflame.

Prost bounced back quickly, though, winning the next race in Brazil – Senna’s home ground – and four more victories kept him in contention against his nemesis. His title hopes, however, ended at the penultimate race in Japan, where Senna had his infamous ‘moment of madness’ at Turn 1 and took both cars out.

The 1991 Ferrari wasn’t competitive enough to string together a title challenge despite the arrival of a new car mid-season. Internal politics built to a point where Prost was fired after the penultimate round, having compared the handling of his car unfavourably with a truck.

1996: Schumacher loses to Irvine

Schumacher suffered a rare defeat to Irvine in qualifying for his first Ferrari race

Schumacher suffered a rare defeat to Irvine in qualifying for his first Ferrari race

Photo by: Motorsport Images

Twice a world champion with Benetton, Michael Schumacher felt compromised by allegations that the team had been cheating and exited his contract early to move to Ferrari. There he faced the challenge of the new V10-powered F310 and team-mate Eddie Irvine, a feisty individual known for not respecting reputations (a trait that had earned him a punch to the head from Senna).

In the season opener in Melbourne, Irvine unexpectedly outperformed Schumacher in qualifying, beating him by two and a half tenths to secure third place on the grid, one spot ahead of Michael. But the fact that they were half a second off the pace of the Williams cars on the front row amply illustrated the challenge facing Ferrari in 1996.

When the race was restarted after a first-lap shunt, Schumacher initially turned the tables on his team-mate and ran third. Brake problems then began to set in, ultimately forcing him to retire and elevating Irvine to third – but it would be Eddie’s only podium that year.

While Irvine only managed three more points finishes and ended the season 10th in the standings, Schumacher claimed three victories in the ungainly-looking F310 in Barcelona, Spa, and Monza. He finished third in the championship behind the dominant Williams drivers, Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve.

The following seasons took a relentless upward trajectory: from 2000 to 2004, Michael took five consecutive world championships in red.

2010: Vettel’s misfortune is Alonso’s gain

Alonso's Ferrari career got off to a great start but never yielded the title

Alonso’s Ferrari career got off to a great start but never yielded the title

Photo by: Sutton Images

When the McLaren relationship turned sour and a return to Renault proved disappointing, Alonso turned to Ferrari in 2010 in the hope of winning a third world championship. But his opening weekend in Bahrain began with disappointment: he qualified 0.35s behind team-mate Felipe Massa.

In the race, Alonso got the upper hand over Massa and ran second until a spark plug failure slowed down leader Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull. Alonso took advantage, swiftly overtook the ailing RB6, and won by 16.1s.

After this early success, Alonso didn’t win another race until round 11, in Germany (controversially, when Ferrari imposed illegal team orders via coded message). A late-season flurry of three further wins meant he arrived at the finale in Abu Dhabi with a narrow points lead over Vettel’s team-mate, Mark Webber, and Vettel himself.

But, despite Vettel’s presence on pole position, the Ferrari pitwall had its eyes on the wrong Red Bull. Pitting early to cover Webber’s stop left Alonso stuck behind Vitaly Petrov’s Renault and consigned him to seventh place at the flag, while Vettel won the race and the championship.

Alonso’s disappointed face after the chequered flag became a meme, symbolising his title-less years at Ferrari.

2015: A podium for Vettel

Vettel was another champion who failed to truly hit the heights while at Ferrari

Vettel was another champion who failed to truly hit the heights while at Ferrari

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

After a winless and frustrating 2014 season, Vettel abandoned Red Bull and sought a fresh start at Ferrari. The Scuderia’s 2015 car was better than its disappointing predecessor and Vettel narrowly outperformed team-mate Kimi Raikkonen to secure fourth on the grid in Melbourne.

Vettel stood little chance against the dominant Mercedes duo of Hamilton and Nico Rosberg, but he did manage to pass Massa’s Williams in the pitstop phase, grabbing third place. He held that position until the chequered flag – a good start to his Ferrari career given Mercedes’ pace advantage.

Indeed, Vettel seemed to overturn the established competitive order in his very next race, qualifying second to Hamilton in Malaysia and then beating both Mercedes in the race. Two more victories in Hungary and Singapore cemented him as Ferrari’s lead driver, with Raikkonen cast as dutiful number two.

However, Vettel was fated never to achieve his ambition of winning a championship with Ferrari.

What about Hamilton?

A reflective Hamilton ponders his Ferrari debut

A reflective Hamilton ponders his Ferrari debut

Photo by: Ferrari

Is there anything approaching a pattern in this history of previous champions gunning for further glory in red? Only that Ferrari debuts can vary dramatically, even for the best of the best.

Some, like Fangio and Alonso, hit the ground running with victories. Others, like Schumacher and Vettel, needed more time to find their rhythm. And some, like Prost, faced immediate setbacks that foreshadowed greater disappointments.

Now, as Hamilton embarks on his Ferrari journey in 2025, the big question remains: will his debut be a sign of things to come?

In this article

Stefan Ehlen

Formula 1

Michael Schumacher

Fernando Alonso

Lewis Hamilton

Alain Prost

Juan Manuel Fangio

Sebastian Vettel

Ferrari

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

Every racing driver dreams of becoming the Formula 1 world champion with Ferrari one day. But very few manage to turn that dream into reality.

This year Lewis Hamilton aims to prove otherwise. His move from Mercedes to Ferrari ranks among the most significant transfers in F1 history because it connects the most successful driver (seven world titles) with the most successful team (15 drivers’ and 16 constructors’ championships).

But Hamilton is by no means the first world champion to make the switch to Maranello. Other title winners have also tried their luck in red – with varying degrees of success.

We take a look at the first grand prix weekend for each of those champions – and whether it foreshadowed a successful title campaign…

1956: Fangio takes a shared victory

Fangio and Ferrari wasn't a perfect match, even if they did win 1956 title together

Fangio and Ferrari wasn’t a perfect match, even if they did win 1956 title together

Photo by: LAT Photographic

Juan Manuel Fangio was already the most successful driver of Formula 1’s first decade when he moved to Ferrari for the 1956 season. He had already won titles in 1951 with Alfa Romeo, in 1954 with Maserati and Mercedes, and in 1955 with Mercedes.

It was a hallmark of Fangio’s career that he ruthlessly sought out the most competitive seats. But this marriage with Ferrari was born out of convenience rather than love, since Merc’s withdrawal from racing and Maserati’s shaky finances made Maranello his best option.

Fangio’s home race in Argentina was his first grand prix for Ferrari. But it didn’t go according to plan: a faulty fuel pump slowed him down, prompting him to take over team-mate Luigi Musso’s car on lap 30 of 98.

Musso had been running in fifth place before handing over. Fangio took off in pursuit of the leaders but overcooked it after passing Jean Behra’s Maserati, losing time to a spin.

Then, over the course of three laps as half-distance approached in the three-hour event, the frontrunners hit trouble. Fangio’s other team-mate Eugenio Castellotti suffered a gearbox failure, Carlos Menditeguy’s Maserati broke a driveshaft, and an ominous plume of smoke developed in the wake of Stirling Moss’s similar car.

Fangio overtook Behra again and made short work of Moss as his engine continued to tighten up. Since Fangio shared his car with Musso, they split the points for the victory. However, Fangio still left Argentina as the championship leader, thanks to an extra point for the fastest lap.

Mechanical trouble dogged Fangio throughout the season and neither did he get on with team manager Eraldo Sculati; he was only persuaded to remain at Ferrari when he was given a mechanic to tend his car exclusively. When a steering arm broke in the final round at Monza, and Musso refused to hand over his car, Fangio’s title hopes looked precarious until Peter Collins did the decent thing: three points for second place in the shared car was enough to stay ahead of Moss.

Fangio then moved to Maserati for 1957, where he secured his fifth and final title.

1990: Retirement sets the tone for Prost’s time at Ferrari

Prost's Ferrari career didn't get off to the best of starts in Phoenix

Prost’s Ferrari career didn’t get off to the best of starts in Phoenix

Photo by: Ercole Colombo

Alain Prost’s bitter rivalry with Ayrton Senna at McLaren meant something had to change. Even before Prost got the 1989 world championship over the line, he’d made arrangements to move to Ferrari – and infuriated McLaren boss Ron Dennis by dropping his trophy into the crowd after winning the Italian Grand Prix.

Prost therefore carried the number one on his Ferrari 641 for the 1990 season opener at the unloved Phoenix street circuit, where unexpected (and unusual for the Arizona desert) rain on Saturday meant the grid was set by times from Friday – this being an era before qualifying was consolidated into one TV-friendly session. That meant Prost started seventh with team-mate Nigel Mansell 17th.

Gearbox issues dropped Prost to ninth at the start. He fought back to fourth by lap 17 but just four laps later his gearbox gave up completely – a less spectacular retirement than Mansell, who spun out with his engine aflame.

Prost bounced back quickly, though, winning the next race in Brazil – Senna’s home ground – and four more victories kept him in contention against his nemesis. His title hopes, however, ended at the penultimate race in Japan, where Senna had his infamous ‘moment of madness’ at Turn 1 and took both cars out.

The 1991 Ferrari wasn’t competitive enough to string together a title challenge despite the arrival of a new car mid-season. Internal politics built to a point where Prost was fired after the penultimate round, having compared the handling of his car unfavourably with a truck.

1996: Schumacher loses to Irvine

Schumacher suffered a rare defeat to Irvine in qualifying for his first Ferrari race

Schumacher suffered a rare defeat to Irvine in qualifying for his first Ferrari race

Photo by: Motorsport Images

Twice a world champion with Benetton, Michael Schumacher felt compromised by allegations that the team had been cheating and exited his contract early to move to Ferrari. There he faced the challenge of the new V10-powered F310 and team-mate Eddie Irvine, a feisty individual known for not respecting reputations (a trait that had earned him a punch to the head from Senna).

In the season opener in Melbourne, Irvine unexpectedly outperformed Schumacher in qualifying, beating him by two and a half tenths to secure third place on the grid, one spot ahead of Michael. But the fact that they were half a second off the pace of the Williams cars on the front row amply illustrated the challenge facing Ferrari in 1996.

When the race was restarted after a first-lap shunt, Schumacher initially turned the tables on his team-mate and ran third. Brake problems then began to set in, ultimately forcing him to retire and elevating Irvine to third – but it would be Eddie’s only podium that year.

While Irvine only managed three more points finishes and ended the season 10th in the standings, Schumacher claimed three victories in the ungainly-looking F310 in Barcelona, Spa, and Monza. He finished third in the championship behind the dominant Williams drivers, Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve.

The following seasons took a relentless upward trajectory: from 2000 to 2004, Michael took five consecutive world championships in red.

2010: Vettel’s misfortune is Alonso’s gain

Alonso's Ferrari career got off to a great start but never yielded the title

Alonso’s Ferrari career got off to a great start but never yielded the title

Photo by: Sutton Images

When the McLaren relationship turned sour and a return to Renault proved disappointing, Alonso turned to Ferrari in 2010 in the hope of winning a third world championship. But his opening weekend in Bahrain began with disappointment: he qualified 0.35s behind team-mate Felipe Massa.

In the race, Alonso got the upper hand over Massa and ran second until a spark plug failure slowed down leader Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull. Alonso took advantage, swiftly overtook the ailing RB6, and won by 16.1s.

After this early success, Alonso didn’t win another race until round 11, in Germany (controversially, when Ferrari imposed illegal team orders via coded message). A late-season flurry of three further wins meant he arrived at the finale in Abu Dhabi with a narrow points lead over Vettel’s team-mate, Mark Webber, and Vettel himself.

But, despite Vettel’s presence on pole position, the Ferrari pitwall had its eyes on the wrong Red Bull. Pitting early to cover Webber’s stop left Alonso stuck behind Vitaly Petrov’s Renault and consigned him to seventh place at the flag, while Vettel won the race and the championship.

Alonso’s disappointed face after the chequered flag became a meme, symbolising his title-less years at Ferrari.

2015: A podium for Vettel

Vettel was another champion who failed to truly hit the heights while at Ferrari

Vettel was another champion who failed to truly hit the heights while at Ferrari

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

After a winless and frustrating 2014 season, Vettel abandoned Red Bull and sought a fresh start at Ferrari. The Scuderia’s 2015 car was better than its disappointing predecessor and Vettel narrowly outperformed team-mate Kimi Raikkonen to secure fourth on the grid in Melbourne.

Vettel stood little chance against the dominant Mercedes duo of Hamilton and Nico Rosberg, but he did manage to pass Massa’s Williams in the pitstop phase, grabbing third place. He held that position until the chequered flag – a good start to his Ferrari career given Mercedes’ pace advantage.

Indeed, Vettel seemed to overturn the established competitive order in his very next race, qualifying second to Hamilton in Malaysia and then beating both Mercedes in the race. Two more victories in Hungary and Singapore cemented him as Ferrari’s lead driver, with Raikkonen cast as dutiful number two.

However, Vettel was fated never to achieve his ambition of winning a championship with Ferrari.

What about Hamilton?

A reflective Hamilton ponders his Ferrari debut

A reflective Hamilton ponders his Ferrari debut

Photo by: Ferrari

Is there anything approaching a pattern in this history of previous champions gunning for further glory in red? Only that Ferrari debuts can vary dramatically, even for the best of the best.

Some, like Fangio and Alonso, hit the ground running with victories. Others, like Schumacher and Vettel, needed more time to find their rhythm. And some, like Prost, faced immediate setbacks that foreshadowed greater disappointments.

Now, as Hamilton embarks on his Ferrari journey in 2025, the big question remains: will his debut be a sign of things to come?

In this article

Stefan Ehlen

Formula 1

Fernando Alonso

Michael Schumacher

Lewis Hamilton

Sebastian Vettel

Alain Prost

Juan Manuel Fangio

Ferrari

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

Mercedes realised before the 2014 season began that their drivers would dominate the championship and decided to impose “rules of engagement” on the pair of them.

The team’s former strategist James Vowles has revealed how they impressed upon Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg the importance of co-operating as team mates while fighting for the title.

Vowles described how they used one of the most controversial episodes from Michael Schumacher’s career as an example of how drivers can spoil their legacies through unsporting incidents. Schumacher collided with rival Jacques Villeneuve while the pair fought for the title in the final round of the 1997 season, and was disqualified from the championship as a result.

Mercedes knew before the season began they would be the team to beat by a wide margin, said Vowles. Therefore they urged Hamilton and Rosberg to race each other fairly and not risk compromising the team.

“Both Nico and Lewis knew that it was one of those two winning the year,” Vowles told High Performance. “And they knew, by the way, before we turned a wheel at the first race.”

Vowles wrote an internal document which laid out “really clear boundaries” on how the pair behaved off the track and interacted with each other on it.

“It starts with an ethos I believe in today,” explained Vowles, who is now Williams’ team principal. “That whole first page was about being a sportsman. To explain it, you can win a world championship, but if you’ve done so in a way that is not fair and sportsmanlike, you will have regrets for the rest of your life.

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“You have a championship to your name, but it’ll be sullied. It’ll be muddied. It won’t be pure.

Lewis Hamilton, Nico Rosberg, Mercedes, Spa-Francorchamps, 2014
Hamilton and Rosberg ‘knew they’d win before the first race’

“We, at the time there, wanted to win things by doing things just better than everyone else. Not because we’ve found other mechanisms, we just want to be better than everyone else. And that applies to the drivers, as it does to the engineers within the team, as it does the designers.”

The team wanted to make the drivers understand “you can become the best sportsman in the world, which will create a legacy for many, many years, or you can win a race by doing something that is perhaps forced or hurt or damaged your team mate. Which [way] do you want to go?”

“It’s a very simple choice when you present it to sportsmen,” he said. “Ultimately they want the one that creates a legacy in many years to come.

“Michael – an incredible man, but still marred by 1997 in many regards. It stands out in everyone’s mind. We created the mindset that ‘that’s not how I want to be remembered, I want to be remembered that we were a dominant force working together’.”

Mercedes gave the drivers assurances that “between the two of you, within these rules, the fastest driver across 20 races will win,” he said.

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“Not the fastest driver on a [single] weekend, not the one that’s done something that’s maybe benefitted them in the short term: The fastest driver on 20 races.

“We’ll construct it and make sure it’s built that way, and we’ll give you each equal opportunity. And they bought into it and it created a good environment.”

Despite Mercedes’ efforts, “breakdowns” occured in the relationship between Hamilton and Rosberg at times, most notably when the pair collided and retired while fighting for the lead on the first lap of the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix.

“It still sticks in my mind today because you’re taking two of these sportsmen that were constrained within their boxes and just got frustrated,” he said. “But actually what you do at the time is you don’t back off, you double down and [tell them]: This is how it’s going to be.”

Schumacher drove for Mercedes between 2010 and 2012, before he was replaced by Hamilton. Vowles said Rosberg’s 2016 championship win showed what he had gained from observing the seven-times champion.

“Michael taught Nico how to work really hard,” he said. “Michael wasn’t the most skilful in the car – that was Lewis. But he knew how to extract every millisecond out of himself and every millisecond out of the team.

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“He was a leader that absolutely would say ‘I’m going to go this way’. The team would follow in there. So much so that both sides of the garage wanted him to do well, so much so that one of my regrets in my career is we didn’t get a win for him. That that still hurts me today. He deserved to win.”

Nico Rosberg, Michael Schumacher, Mercedes, 2010
Rosberg learned from Schumacher, said Vowles

Schumacher’s behaviour with the rest of the team, and focus on extracting the maximum from himself, made an impression on Rosberg, Vowles believes.

“He had a genuine interest in who you were and your life. I went motorbiking on-track with him […] in Paul Ricard and we had the time of our lives. We both still laughed about it so many years after that.

“He knew at the time my partner’s birthday, flowers arrived at home and embarrassed me because I didn’t do that much. He would take a genuine interest in who you are, who your family is, what drives you, every single person on the team. That’s hard to do.

“And [he wasn’t] doing it because he wanted to gain an advantage. He does it because he really cares. That’s Michael. The Michael you had facing the media is a very different Michael to what was behind the scenes.

“That’s how he did it, fundamentally. He would bring everyone on the journey and lead them on the journey. He would squeeze himself, every millisecond he had, he would work as late as he needed to, every hour he needed to. That was how he operated.

“Nico learned a tremendous amount from him. It formed the Nico that then became a world champion ultimately, which is to squeeze everything out of you [that] you can at the cost of everything else.”

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Three men have been convicted of trying to blackmail Michael Schumacher’s family for millions of euros.

A German court has jailed one individual for three years after he threatened to upload 900 photos, 600 videos, plus medical reports of the seven-time Formula 1 world champion to the dark web unless Schumacher’s family paid a ransom of €15million.

A second man has been charged with aiding and abetting by the district court in Wuppertal, western Germany, and issued a six-month suspended sentence.

A former security guard at Schumacher’s home was also served with a two-year suspended sentence despite pleading to having had no involvement in the extortion.

German news agency DPA reported that judge Birgit Neubert said the former security worker was responsible for the most significant part of the crime due to a breach of the trust placed in him by the Schumacher family to protect them.

The family’s lawyer, Thilo Damm, said they will appeal in the case against the former security guard as they wanted a four-year prison term.

Schumacher, 56, has not been seen in public since he suffered a serious brain injury while skiing in December 2013.

Michael Schumacher with his wife Corinna Schumacher in 2010

Michael Schumacher with his wife Corinna Schumacher in 2010

Photo by: Daniel Kalisz / Motorsport Images

He retired from F1 in 2012 and was transferred from hospital in September 2014 and has since been cared for privately at the family’s home in Switzerland.

His family has demanded privacy and the blackmail attempt threatened to expose details about his condition.

It is understood that while the majority of the evidence was confiscated by the German authorities, a second hard drive remains missing.

Since his skiing accident, Schumacher’s condition has been a constant source of interest in the media, which has been railed against by the family.

In 2023, the Schumacher family successfully won legal action over a publisher of a magazine that printed an AI-generated interview with the seven-time world champion.

German magazine Die Aktuelle ran his image on the cover in April 2023 with the headline: “Michael Schumacher, the first interview!”

The AI-made article was found to be misleading and the publisher was ordered to pay compensation of €200,000.

The German publisher, Funke magazines, also apologised to Schumacher’s family and sacked the magazine’s chief editor.

In this article

Ben Hunt

Formula 1

Michael Schumacher

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A German court has sentenced a nightclub bouncer to three years in jail over a plot to blackmail Michael Schumacher’s family for €15 million (£12.5m).

Yilmaz Tozturkan is one of three people to have been sentenced over the plan. His son Daniel Lins was given a six-month suspended sentence for his role, according to reports in German media. Markus Fritsche, Schumacher’s former bodyguard, was given a two-year suspended sentence.

The trial found Tozturkan obtained over 1,500 files including images, videos and medical records and told the Schumacher family the private material would be uploaded to the dark web unless payment was made. Tozturkan expressed regret for his actions during the trial.

The Schumacher family’s lawyer Thilo Damm described the sentences as “lenient” and said they would appeal against them. The family also expressed concerns that not all of the sensitive material obtained by the defendants had been recovered despite several searches of their properties.

The seven-times world champion, who retired from Formula 1 in 2012, has not been seen in public since suffering a serious brain injury in a skiing crash in France during December 2013.

His family has endeavoured to keep details of his condition private since then. Soon after the accident one journalist was accused of attempting to gain access to the former driver by impersonating a priest.

The Schumacher family received compensation last year after a German magazine published what it claimed to be an “interview” with the driver, which appeared to have been generated using artificial intelligence. Funke-Mediengruppe, publishers of Die Aktuell, gave the family £170,000 (€200,000).

One of the few official comments made by the family on Schumacher in recent years appeared in a 2021 documentary. In the programme his wife Corinna said: “Everybody misses Michael, but Michael is here. Different, but he’s here, and that gives us strength, I find.”

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