The Peterborough Examiner

Vettel may leave Ferrari without a title

- JEROME PUGMIRE

Sebastian Vettel may walk away from Ferrari having never delivered the Formula One title the proud Italian team so desperatel­y wants.

The four-time world champion is leaving at the end of the year by mutual consent. But it remains uncertain if the season will start amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, with the first10 races already postponed or cancelled.

The 32-year-old German driver joined Ferrari in 2015 to replace Fernando Alonso, but was unable to add to his world titles at Red Bull from ’10 to ’13.

Observers expected him to break Michael Schumacher’s record of seven F1 titles. Now that is within reach of world champion Lewis Hamilton, who has six.

Hamilton’s rise with Mercedes has been mirrored by Vettel’s gradual slide at Ferrari.

Of Vettel’s 53 career wins, 14 came with Ferrari, including only one last year.

“In order to get the best possible results in this sport, it’s vital for all parties to work in perfect harmony,” Vettel said Tuesday.

“The team and I have realized that there is no longer a common desire to stay together.”

Vettel’s existing contract earns him $40 million per year, but he said finances played no part in the mutual decision.

“That’s not the way I think when it comes to making certain choices,” he said.

Vettel had ample chances to win Ferrari’s first world title since Kimi Raikkonen in 2007. The team’s last constructo­rs’ title was in ’06.

Vettel led the championsh­ip at the halfway stage in ’17 and ’18, but a series of clumsy mistakes — unbefittin­g a driver of his vast experience — proved costly.

At Singapore in ’17, he launched off pole position and tried to cut off Max Verstappen’s Red Bull, causing a multicar crash that Hamilton avoided to win the GP and reclaim the championsh­ip lead.

At the German GP in ’18, Vettel was set to win at Hockenheim. Holding a comfortabl­e lead and with Hamilton some distance behind, Vettel misjudged a routine turn and crashed into the barriers, again gifting Hamilton a win and the championsh­ip momentum.

Last year, the pressure appeared to affect Vettel’s judgment. Furious that he was stripped of victory at the Canadian GP because of a time penalty, he theatrical­ly grabbed the big No. 1 sign and parked it in front of his car, while moving the No. 2 in front of Hamilton’s Mercedes.

Then came a bemusing moment at the Italian GP in Monza. Again under no pressure, Vettel spun his car — just as he had done in Bahrain earlier that season. He carelessly tried to come back on the track and almost speared into Lance Stroll, who was turning his Racing Point car into the same area and just managed to swerve past.

Vettel was also not helped by erratic and sometimes conflictin­g team orders, although by the same token his win last year at Singapore was because orders went in his favour over Charles Leclerc.

The speedy rise of Leclerc at Ferrari proved difficult to handle for Vettel last year. Despite being in his debut season with Ferrari, and only his second in F1, Leclerc won more races than Vettel and even beat Hamilton 7-5 for most pole positions. It led to tension within Ferrari, which reached a breaking point in November when the drivers crashed into each other at the Brazilian GP.

Leclerc made a clean overtaking move on Vettel down the inside, and Vettel tried to reclaim his position by moving on the outside of Leclerc’s car. They touched wheels and both cars went out of the race.

Vettel finished a dismal fifth overall in the championsh­ip race, beaten by Leclerc and Verstappen, who finished third behind the Mercedes pair of Valtteri Bottas and Hamilton.

Leclerc tweeted a picture of himself and Vettel celebratin­g with the team.

“It’s been a huge honour for me to be your teammate. We’ve had some tense moments on tracks,” Leclerc wrote. “Some very good ones and some others that didn’t end as we both wanted, but there was always respect.”

Leclerc, just as quick and 10 years younger than Vettel, was clearly seen as the Italian manufactur­er’s future. He signed a new deal until the end of 2024 while Vettel’s was still on hold.

 ?? MARK THOMPSON GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Driver Sebastian Vettel celebrates on the podium after winning the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix on April 8, 2018.
MARK THOMPSON GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Driver Sebastian Vettel celebrates on the podium after winning the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix on April 8, 2018.

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