The Malta Independent on Sunday

Ferrari has burning ambition to win 1st Monaco GP since 2001

Motor-racing Formula 1

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Raikkonen was sixth.

Ferrari has stepped up the pace this year and, with increased reliabilit­y, is matching Mercedes, which has won the last three drivers’ and constructo­rs’ titles.

After five races, Vettel leads the championsh­ip by six points from Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton; while Mercedes is eight ahead of Ferrari in the constructo­rs’ race.

But Ferrari may be a bit quicker than Mercedes this year, and the increased pressure has forced some uncharacte­ristic errors.

During the second practice on Thursday, Mercedes made a sloppy mistake when misjudging a tire switch onto the quicker ultra-soft compound. That allowed Ferrari to top the charts in P2, with Vettel fastest and Raikkonen third.

“It is important to start from the front of the grid, here more than anywhere else,” Vettel said.

Ferrari’s vastly improved reliabilit­y suits Vettel perfectly. The German driver is remarkably consistent if the car allows him to be - like it was when he won four straight titles with Red Bull. But he is also quickly irritated when the car lets him down, as it often did last year.

There have been no Vettel tirades over the race radio. He has placed in the top two in all five races, winning in Australia and Bahrain.

“The single-lap pace is very promising,” Vettel said. “The aim is to get faster.”

Vettel’s confidence has definitely returned, along with some of his old panache.

At the Spanish GP two weeks ago, he was being held up by Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas and could not find a way past. So he tried a move from his karting days; a dummy move from right to left and then swiftly back right again to pass Bottas on the inside.

It is highly unlikely there will be a repeat of that today, given that the narrow and sinewy Monaco street circuit is arguably the hardest track in F1 to overtake on. Drivers are often brushing the barriers anyway, and this year’s wider cars make that an even more perilous possibilit­y.

“Here you are not entirely the master of your own fate, as many things can happen in a long race,” said Vettel, who has twice been forced to retire during the Monaco GP. “Let’s keep the fingers crossed.”

 ??  ?? Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany waves to the fans from the paddock Photo: AP
Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany waves to the fans from the paddock Photo: AP

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