Micheal

Why Michael Schumacher Claimed Gina’s ‘Selfishness’ Made Her Better Athlete Than Wife Corinna

In the long shadow of Michael Schumacher’s silence, his daughter’s relentless focus on horses has become both her refuge and her inheritance.

Michael Schumacher‘s daughter, Gina, has revealed how the seven-time Formula 1 world champion once told his wife Corinna that their girl would become a better athlete than her because she was ‘more selfish,’ a prediction explored in a new documentary about Gina’s life that was announced and filmed between family ranches in the United States and Switzerland.

Michael has lived out of the public eye since suffering a traumatic brain injury in a skiing accident in 2013. Gina was 16 when her father fell on the slopes, an event that reshaped not just his life but the rhythm of the entire family. Since then, only a tiny circle has known what daily life looks like for the Schumachers, and updates on his condition have been almost nonexistent. In that silence, the focus has shifted to his children’s careers, Gina forging her own path in Western riding, while her brother Mick continues to chase success in motorsport.

The new film, Horsepower – The World of Gina Schumacher, edges that door open a fraction. It tracks the 29-year-old across sprawling ranches in the US and Switzerland, charting her rise in the niche but fiercely competitive reining discipline, where she has become a multiple world champion. According to the documentary, she captured double gold in both individual and team events in 2025, consolidating her position at the sharp end of the sport.

What gives the project more emotional charge, though, is its timing. It revisits the period after Michael’s accident, when Gina says she turned to horses as a way to cope with a reality she could not alter. ‘After Dad’s accident, I really threw myself into [riding] because I had to do something,’ she explains. ‘The horses have always been important. But since then they’ve really been… I mean, I couldn’t do without horses. They helped me get through everything.

Those are not the words of someone dabbling in a family hobby. They sound like someone who found a survival mechanism and turned it into a profession. It is also here that Michael’s remark about ‘selfishness’ takes on a different shape.

Michael Schumacher, Family Dynamics And A Ruthless Edge

Corinna recalls a conversation from when Gina was just ten. ‘Michael once said to me, when Gina was 10: ‘Gina will be much better than you,” she says. ”Because she’s more selfish. If you’re an athlete, you have to be selfish in a certain way. And that’s great. Otherwise, you won’t amount to anything.’ Today I think: He was so right.’

There is a familiar harshness to that line for anyone who has followed elite sport. The idea that real success demands a certain narrowing of focus, even at the expense of balance, is hardly new. Coming from Michael, whose own career was built on an almost obsessive competitive streak, it lands less as an insult and more as a slightly unsparing compliment.

Gina’s performances suggest he may have gauged her temperament accurately. Reining demands precision, nerve and a kind of quiet, internal steel. Multiple world titles and that 2025 double gold are not the achievements of someone easily distracted. Yet she appears wary of taking any of it for granted. ‘I’m grateful that I can do this. Because it’s not something to take for granted,’ she says. ‘My parents made it possible. That’s why it’s always been important to me to work hard so I can do it as well as I possibly can.’

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