Schumacher dominant in Formula One

? Michael Schumacher was the first driver on the track for prequalifying at the Australian Grand Prix in March.

When the season came to a close Sunday, he was first again — winning a record sixth Formula One championship with an uncharacteristic finish of eighth in the Japanese Grand Prix.

“It is very strange for me because most of my championships have been won with a victory,” Schumacher said. “Here I am today winning the championship in eighth position. It is with mixed emotion, though.”

It was that way for him most of the season.

In between there were highs and lows ranging from mourning when he and his brother Ralf lost their mother hours before the Italian Grand Prix, to jubilation and relief when he and the team clinched titles on the final day of the season.

There was early concern when he trailed Kimi Raikkonen after three races.

“I was thinking we still have everything open to fight for the championship,” Schumacher said. “I didn’t write off the championship at that stage.”

Indeed. He won four of the next five races.

But frustration set in when he failed to win any of the next five — that slump included the Hungarian Grand Prix, when he was lapped by 22-year-old Fernando Alonso. Schumacher’s two closest pursuers — Raikkonen and Juan Pablo Montoya — were within two points of him entering the last three races of the season.

Some wondered if Schumacher was still at the top of his game.

“How many people wrote things about us?” he asked.

Then Schumacher won the next two races to virtually clinch the title before coming to Japan. A single point would ensure it and that is what he got.