Barrichello on pole as Schumacher skids

World champion Michael Schumacher stumbled to a career low in qualifying for tomorrow's inaugural Chinese Grand Prix as Ferrari…

World champion Michael Schumacher stumbled to a career low in qualifying for tomorrow's inaugural Chinese Grand Prix as Ferrari team mate Rubens Barrichello powered to pole position.

The Brazilian's pole was his third of the season, and 12th of his career. After speeding around the $325 million circuit in one minute 34.012 seconds, he watched in amazement as Schumacher went off at the first corner on his decisive lap after setting the fastest time in the previous session.

It was the worst qualifying performance of the German's 210-race career and he will have to start at the rear with the struggling Minardis and fight his way through the field.

"If you know me, I never give up," said Schumacher, who secured his unprecedented seventh world championship in Belgium last month after 12 wins in the first 13 races of the season.

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"I'm Michael Schumacher. I don't need to test my driving ability, but it's certainly interesting to do what I have to do from where I am now."

Barrichello will share the front row with Finland's Kimi Raikkonen, winner in Belgium for McLaren, with Briton Jenson Button for BAR and Sauber's Brazilian Felipe Massa behind them.

Raikkonen, overall runner-up to Schumacher last season, was just 0.166 of a second off Barrichello's pace and is confident of doing well in a key race for all the major manufacturers as they seek to impress a rapidly growing market.

BAR and Renault are fighting for second place in a championship already won by Ferrari, with the Honda-powered team three points ahead. Button's performance raised BAR's spirits after an engine failure in practice cost Japanese team mate Takuma Sato 10 places on the grid. Sato was ninth fastest but will be battling it out with Schumacher at the start.

Germany's Ralf Schumacher made a strong comeback after three months out following his crash at the US Grand Prix, qualifying his Williams on the third row alongside Renault's Fernando Alonso. Canadian Jacques Villeneuve, who will start his first race in almost a year as a replacement for Italian Jarno Trulli at Renault, qualified 12th.