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Vettel breaks Ferrari’s F1 drought with victory at Australian GP

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MELBOURNE: Sebastian Vettel broke Ferrari’s Formula One drought with a victory over the Mercedes team of Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas on Sunday at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix.

Ferrari had not won an F1 GP since Vettel’s victory in Singapore in 2015, and so his leap up onto the top of the podium at the finish in Australia signaled renewed confidence from him and perhaps an end to the domination Mercedes has forged in recent seasons.

“For now, we’re just over the moon,” fourtime world champion Vettel said. “It’s been a hard winter, and an incredible race today. We’re here, we’re here to fight.”

With regulation­s designed to make the 2017 F1 cars faster — including wider tires, greater aerodynami­cs, bigger fuel loads and increased downforce — Vettel proved Ferrari’s extra pace in pre-season testing was genuine.

“It’s good to know we have a great car but it’s just the beginning ... with new regulation­s, a new generation of cars,” Vettel said. “Mercedes have a great engine and a great car the last couple of years — we’re the ones who’ve had to catch up. Whatever happens this year, the race today doesn’t hurt.”

Vettel finished in 1 hour, 24 minutes and 11.672 seconds, almost 10 seconds clear of Hamilton, to give Ferrari its first win in Australia since Kimi Raikkonen took the title in 2007. Raikkonen, in the second Ferrari, finished fourth this year.

For the second year running, Hamilton started on pole position at the Albert Park circuit and placed second. Last year, he lost to then Mercedes teammate Nico Rosberg, who went on to edge him for the world championsh­ip before retiring. This time, Vettel took the lead when Hamilton pitted for new tires on lap 18 and then got stuck in traffic behind Red Bull driver Max Verstappen.

Vettel was able to pit much later and gradually build up his lead as Hamilton drove conservati­vely on older tires to ensure he finished the race.

“That’s motor racing,” Hamilton said of the hold-up, adding it was his decision to pit and change tires. “A big congratula­tions to Ferrari. It’s been a long time coming ... (and) it shows we’re going to have a race on our hands. That’s good to the fans.”

Mercedes won 19 of the 21 GPs last season, and Red Bull won the other two. But Red Bull was well off the pace in Melbourne, with Verstappen placing fifth — almost 29 seconds behind Vettel — and local hope Daniel Ricciardo failing to finish.

In fact, the Australian driver almost did not start. Ricciardo’s day started badly and kept getting worse as he got a grid penalty, missed the start after a mechanical failure in the warmup, and then retired after 28 laps.

He was among seven drivers who retired during the race. Former champion Fernando Alonso continued to struggle in his McLaren, retiring on the 50th of 57 laps, while 18-yearold Canadian rookie Lance Stroll got a grid penalty after needing an unschedule­d gearbox change after a crash in practice and was wayward in his 40 laps on debut for Williams.

Haas did not get a car across the finish, with Romain Grosjean out after 13 laps and Kevin Magnussen out after an eventful 46 laps.

Felipe Massa earned points for Williams with a sixth-place finish, while Force India teammates Sergio Perez and Esteban Ocon were 7th and 10th in their pink cars and finished either side of Toro Rosso drivers Carlos Sainz and Daniil Kvyat.

 ??  ?? Ferrari’s German driver Sebastian Vettel celebrates with the winner’s trophy on the podium following his victory in the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on Sunday. (AFP)
Ferrari’s German driver Sebastian Vettel celebrates with the winner’s trophy on the podium following his victory in the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on Sunday. (AFP)

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