The Star Late Edition

A red-letter day for Vettel brings back the smiles

- At the

MELBOURNE: Sebastian Vettel, pic

tured, has lived through a number of false dawns at Ferrari but bright sunshine bathed the team’s garage after the German’s Australian Grand Prix victory yesterday.

The four-time world champion cruised to his second win at Albert Park and 43rd overall with a nearly 10-second gap over Mercedes runner-up Lewis Hamilton, proving the Ferrari cars’ encouragin­g winter testing was not just a mirage.

A gloom has hovered over Maranello for a number of seasons and it seemed at its most thick last year as Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen failed to win a race amid reports of disharmony in the team garage.

But it was all bear-hugs and back-slap ping at Albert Park yesterday as Vettel crossed for the team’s first win since his last victory at the Singapore Grand Prix in 2015.

“We say this all the time, what this team has done in the last six months has been really tough, rough as well,” a beaming Vettel said after the race.

“(It’s) not (been) easy to manage the whole team, but I think the new car in general, obviously, is fantastic and this is a great reward, a big relief for everyone.

“There’s been a lot of ups and downs, left and rights in the last 12 months.

“The big difference was being able to deliver a really good car.

“I saw the guys (in the garage), they were smiling and singing, I’m sure we’ll see some more of that.

“But ... it’s just the beginning. Motivation has been really high but obviously it helps to wave from the podium.”

Vettel started second on the grid and had a poor start to give Hamilton clear air but the Mercedes driver pitted early to change tyres after complainin­g of poor grip.

Luck played a part in Vettel’s fourth win with the Scuderia as Hamilton rejoined the race behind Red Bull’s belligeren­t teenage racer Max Verstappen, who was not about to let the Briton pass. After his own tyre-change, Vettel re-entered the race with perfect timing, sneaking in front of Verstappen and Hamilton before forging ahead to close out a dominant win.

His teammate, Raikkonen. finished fourth behind third-placed Valtteri Bottas, who made his Mercedes debut after crossing from Williams. Jock Clear, Ferrari’s head of racing activities, said he was uncertain whether their cars were quicker than Mercedes in “absolute terms”.

Vettel was also far from getting carried away about his prospects of winning a fifth title.

“It’s not the time to look table. Step by step,” he said.

“(There are) new rules, regulation­s and generation­s of cars.

“(Mercedes) made good steps forward and we are the ones that need to catch up. Whatever happens this year, the race today doesn’t hurt.”

The next race, the Chinese GP, is on April 9. – Reuters

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