Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Vettel flies the Ferrari flag high

- RAJA SEN Writer is a film critic and has been writing on Formula One since 2004

Lewis Hamilton may have cut a deal with the clouds.

Over the last five races of this Formula One season, we have witnessed — over sector-times and practice sessions — the increasing pace of Ferrari engines. This advantage hasn’t translated to a proportion­ate number of wins though, thanks to poor strategic calls and driver errors. Ferrari’s biggest foe, however? Rain.

The single-minded engineerin­g of current F1 cars ensures that the fastest car — the one most capable of generating speed in a straight-line — is rarely the best in conditions that require it to be driven slowly. Two races ago, Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel spun out while leading the German Grand Prix, failing to negotiate the rain lashing the track and allowing a resurgent Hamilton to inherit victory. In Belgium, Ferrari had led every practice session and two qualifying sessions when rain struck in Q3. Hamilton took one of the year’s most unlikely pole positions, while Vettel scrambled his way to second place.

Cue the déjà vu. Last year, when Vettel had tried to slingshot past Hamilton on the same gorgeous Belgian track of Spa-Francorcha­mps, he was thwarted both by the British driver brilliantl­y ensuring Vettel didn’t get an optimum slipstream, and by the Ferrari’s lack of full-blooded throttle. This Sunday, the German driver screamed past with a perfectly judged pass. Later an incredulou­s Hamilton shook his head. “He drove past me like I wasn’t even there.”

There was a horrific crash behind them: Nico Hulkenberg drove Fernando Alonso into the air, sending him hurtling across what might have been the head of Charles LeClerc, if not for the Halo, the F1 safety ‘cockpit’ introduced this year. Now that lives have indeed been saved, this device is controvers­ial no more.

Vettel timed Sunday right. He overtook Hamilton after that crash but crucially before the safety car was announced, handled the safety car restart with the aplomb he regularly used to show when winning championsh­ips with a class-of-the-field Red Bull, and finally held the race lead with a flawless pitstop. Not that he needed to sweat. He finished 12 seconds ahead, and is now 17 points behind Hamilton heading into the Italian Grand Prix this Sunday. That track is not just Ferrari’s home but also full of very fast, very straight lines.

After the race, Hamilton — who, last month, absurdly accused Ferrari drivers of intentiona­lly crashing into Mercedes drivers — climbed out of his car and stood staring at the red car he could not match. He said something about Ferrari using “tricks”, before backpedall­ing to clarify that he wasn’t accusing them of illegality yet. F1 Race Director Charlie Whiting laughed this off, as did most fans, but this predictabl­e tendency to whine and pout over defeats may be Hamilton’s least championes­que attribute. It clouds his legacy. Hamilton needs to learn to lose. Vettel might enjoy teaching him.

 ?? AFP ?? After winning the Belgian GP on Sunday, Sebastian Vettel trails Lewis Hamilton by 17 points going into the Italian GP.
AFP After winning the Belgian GP on Sunday, Sebastian Vettel trails Lewis Hamilton by 17 points going into the Italian GP.
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