Diamond Fields Advertiser

ROSBERG FEELS FOR FERRARI FANS FOLLOWING FAILURE

- SPORTS CORRESPOND­ENT IN SUZUKA, JAPAN

FERRARI’S continuing reliabilit­y woes have robbed Formula One fans and Mercedes of the thrilling battle they had been hoping for, last year’s world champion Nico Rosberg said yesterday.

The German, who had to fight down to the last race before securing his title, expressed disappoint­ment at the latest in a sequence of setbacks for Ferrari’s leading contender Sebastian Vettel.

Vettel returned to the pits and stepped out of the car after four laps of the Japanese Grand Prix, leaving Lewis Hamilton to win for Mercedes and forge 59 points clear with four races remaining.

Depending on results, Hamilton could win his fourth title at the next race in the United States on October 22.

“For all of us F1 fans we wanted to see the big action out there and with Sebastian having a problem straight off the start, that’s not really what we want to see,” said Rosberg, at Suzuka as a pundit for Sky Sports television.

“But it’s also not what Mercedes want to see because they want to win after a great battle. “And Lewis as well.

“Lewis is a fighter and he would love to have that great battle with Seb and come out on top. But that’s the way it is and that’s the way racing is,” added the German, who retired in December.

Hamilton also felt for a rival suffering through no fault of his own.

Incredibly unfortunat­e

champion crashing out on the opening lap in Singapore and then starting in last place in Malaysia due to engine problems in qualifying.

Vettel had won the season-opener in Australia in March and led the championsh­ip until Italy at the start of September.

“If four races ago I would have told you that Sebastian is going to DNF (not finish) two times and not score well one time, you would have said that’s almost impossible,” said Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff.

The Austrian went to the Ferrari pit wall after the race to commiserat­e with his rivals.

“The Ferrari guys certainly feel awful at the moment,” he told the assembled media. “I get on very well with them and with (principal) Maurizio (Arrivabene) and it’s not a situation you want to be in.

“Maybe it’s a developmen­t slope of the team, they made a huge step forward from 2016 to 2017 and their car is super-fast, it just lacks reliabilit­y and that is the next step.” – Reuters FRUSTRATIO­N: Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel of Germany suffered his third setback in as many races when he had to retire just four laps into the Japanese Formula One Grand Prix at Suzuka yesterday, gifting Lewis Hamilton the win and a 59-point lead on the championsh­ip table with just four races to go in the season.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa