Who is Michael Schumacher’s son Mick? Former Mercedes driver who has found new motorsport seat

THERE'S a certain weight that comes with being the son of seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher - and son Mick has found all about it in recent years.
Mick, 26, had been tipped to succeed his father's impeccable racing standards the second he set foot in a karting track.
However, Michael Schumacher's youngest child has found his competitive motorsport career dwindling.
Mick was last seen in a Formula 1 pit garage last December as a reserve driver for Mercedes.
He left his position at the end of the 2024 season to focus on his newfound role in endurance racing.
Nowadays, he is striving to get back to the elite staring of the racing world.
Born and raised in the Swiss village Vufflens-le-Chateau, Schumacher was born into a racing royalty with his father and uncle Ralf both in F1.
The generational success that his father set that weighed heaviest in his formative years in racing and beyond.
Mick had a good karting career - fishing runner-up at the World and European level - before making the jump to European Formula 3, winning the championship in his final season with Prema Racing.
He would follow that up with another title Formula 2 in 2020 ahead of Brit Callum Ilott and future Red Bull driver Yuki Tsunoda.
Mick had test drives with Alfa Romeo and Haas - aided by his association with the Ferrari Driver Academy - then signed with the latter as a full-time driver in 2021.
Schumacher's two-season F1 career was characterised by rookie blunders and team deficiencies, initially alongside controversial team-mate Nikita Mazepin - son of Belarusian-Russian oligarch and sponsor Dmitry - and than outperformed by Kevin Magnussen.
In his second season, the German driver scored his first and second lot of points in back-to-back weekends at Silverstone and the Red Bull Ring in Austria, where he registered a career-best sixth finish.
However, Schumacher was released from his contract going into the 2023 season as the team altered direction with successor and racing journeyman Nico Hulkenberg.
Recently, he has served as a reserve driver for both Mercedes and McLaren - not suiting up for either team.
Schumacher made his first ventures into the World Endurance Championship with Alpine while still occupying his reserve driver duties.
Schumacher has continued to race with Alpine's World Endurance Championship six-man Hypercar team full-time after achieving his maiden podium finish at the 6 Hours of Fuji.
Additionally, Schumacher also competed in the 2025 Race of Champions in Sydney at the start of the month alongside family friend Sebastian Vettel with Will Brown pipping him to a semi-final spot in the main draw.
Schumacher still harbours hopes of returning to F1 as a driver with the 2026 new regulations era providing the first real opening for a seat, particularly with Cadillac's incoming arrival to the grid.
"Formula One has always been my dream and will always be my dream. But the WEC is the number one priority," he told Sky Germany. "That requires 100 per cent dedication."
He went on to add: "My dream is a dream, but when I'm in the car, I'm 100 per cent in the car. The dream lives on in the moments when I have free time and can think about it."
Cadillac have expressed a public interest in signing an American driver with a big-name, and in motorsport, it doesn't get bigger Schumacher.