Jolyon Palmer Draws Controversial Comparison Between Verstappen and Schumacher

19:39, 09 Jun
Updated: 21:53, 09 Jun
10 Comments
Former F1 driver and current F1TV analyst Jolyon Palmer is raging against Max Verstappen over his actions at the Spanish Grand Prix where he received a hefty penalty for his crash with George Russell is still a hot topic, as discussed in the F1 Nation podcast. In it, Jolyon Palmer drew a comparison between Verstappen and Michael Schumacher, but not in a good way.
Palmer found it impossible to come up with a case to defend Verstappen's actions which received a hefty penalty: “There's no justification for deliberately trying to crash a formula one car and that's what he tried to do you know he tried to barge into george russell and there's no i just don't see there's any justification.
"He is a four-time world champion he's the best driver in the field I still believe and people are looking up to him as idols. How many people wear a Senna helmet or they wear a Schumacher helmet coming through the ranks?"
"And you're looking at karters, you're looking at young drivers and you're thinking, 'is it actually okay to be a bit more Max Verstappen and to maybe deliberately drive into someone effectively?' And I just don't think in a sport there's justification.”
Palmer proceded to compare the Dutchman to Nick Kyrgios, an elite level athlete who is known to be judged by his on-the-limit approach. But Palmer is particularly dissapointed in Verstappen because of the amount of talent he possesses, made evident in the Miami Grand Prix.
“If you take Miami for example, not many people would put up the I don't know 10-12 lap fight he had with both Mclarens and it made for amazing viewing. Most other driver, if you put them in the lead of the race, the Mclarens are breathing down on them, they are not throwing the Hail-Mary defenses which is getting us on the edge of our seat, so it's amazing viewing.”
Max Verstappen chases down Lando Norris at the Spanish Grand Prix
Max Verstappen chases down Lando Norris at the Spanish Grand Prix

Verstappen 'rule breaker and controversial like Schumacher?

However, Palmer ended with a critical note: “I think you have to draw the line for me at sportsmanship and it's what I personally didn't like about Michael Schumacher growing up because he was sometimes over the edge and as a young Damon Hill fan, that season finale in Adelaide was controversial. Then the season finale in Xerez was even more controversial. The Rascasse move was controversial.”
“Some people love it. And you could say it's box office. I'm reeling off iconic moments from the history of sport, but is being iconic what you're trying to be? Because you're effectively just breaking the rules here and you're being unsporting and you're being a bad example at the same time. So there's a fine line, isn't there, between having these moments and actually doing the right thing?"