Michael Schumacher era “hostile, you didn’t talk to anybody”
‘If you want friends, bring the𝄹m, you’re not ꧂here to make friends.’

Michael Schumacher’s golden era was “hostile”, according to his ex-riv🔯al Juan Pablo Montoya.
Montoya has compared the tetchy relationship that F1 drivers had in the 1990s aওnd 2000s to today’s friendlier atmosphere.
However, the chumminess between today’s generation was te💮sted last season when Max Verstappen riled up Lando Norris and George Russell.
Mo𒉰ntoya told the Beyond The Grid podcast: “Now, with soc♈ial media, the teammates are best friends! They go for dinner, they play padel together!
“In my day, you wouldn’t talk to anybody. I spoke to Fernando Alonso, and I still do, and Rubens Barrichello. Felipe Massa s🐲ometimes, but that’s it."
'Hostile' atmosphere in F1 paddock
“It was very hostile. You di🌸dn’t talk to anybody," Montoya said.
“Chip Ganassi had𝓰 one of the best linesꦜ ever. I was nice to somebody, I wasn’t cutthroat when I raced him. He said to me: ‘If you want friends, bring them, you’re not here to make friends.’
“It’s true.
“Now, everybody talks and everybody is nice.
“But when you are nice, it’s hard to be an asshole. It’s hard to pull a move to drive a guy of🎃f the track, 💙if you like the guy.
“If it’s 🙈the guy you had dinner with last night? It’s har⛄der to throw the car. It’s not as cutthroat.
“Now, the rules are not so extreme. In my time, you could dr♚ive the🃏m off the track!”
Montoya clashed notoriously with Schumacher, who rulღed the roost at🌌 the time.
Colombian driver Montoya won seven F1 gran🉐ds prix, and represented Williams☂ and McLaren.

James was a sports journalist♈ at Sky Sports for a decade covering everything from American sports, to football, to F1.