Daily Mail

Bad for Vettel... bad for Mercedes

Why F1 return would be wrong for Seb

- By JONATHAN McEVOY

Sebastian Vettel’s deeds stand for themselves. He has won as many championsh­ips as alain Prost — four.

Only Juan Manuel Fangio (five) and the seven-time wonders of this world have claimed more than the great argentine — Lewis Hamilton and Michael schumacher. this places Vettel in the very highest rank of drivers ever known.

On a personal level, i like seb. i first knew him when he was arriving on the Formula One scene. a colleague and i were having dinner at bMW sauber’s motorhome and he came scampering over. a devotee of english humour, not least of Only Fools and Horses, he was most amused by a new word he had heard: ‘kerfuffle’.

it had come over his radio from the pit wall, and he was fascinated by it. Further, and far more importantl­y, he spoke brilliantl­y, movingly and eruditely many years later at a tribute at silverston­e to the memory of respected race director Charlie Whiting, who had died suddenly at the australian Grand Prix, in 2019.

seb was a director of the Grand Prix Drivers’ associatio­n at this point, and none of his contempora­ries could have delivered a eulogy in a second language as eloquently about Charlie as seb did that evening.

He was as smart as he was genuine, too. no driver of the modern era was as friendly with bernie ecclestone, then the biggest figure in the sport. they played backgammon together. bernie usually won. their relationsh­ip was obviously warm, and i believe it remains so.

so having told you how much i like seb, i do not for a moment believe he should join Mercedes as Hamilton’s replacemen­t next season. His talent as a wonderfull­y fast driver, especially when a front-runner, is not in doubt. but he drifted into an ordinary standard in the his last years at Ferrari and aston VetteL

Martin, mistakes abounding.

retired in 2022, aged 35, harangued in his own mind about the green implicatio­ns of his globe-trotting sport. ‘Climate Justice now’, he wore on his t- shirt. He was worried about the planet, yet he went on to the end of the season.

i sent him up for his delay, a cake-and-eat-it paradox. He said he drove to races rather than flew where applicable to save us all from oblivion.

Mercedes have courted him for years. i reported how toto Wolff, the Mercedes team principal, had attended Vettel’s 30th birthday party in switzerlan­d.

Mercedes tried to get me sacked for this. true. they said i did not know what i was talking about. i said i had the story from a Mercedes source. they cried ‘lies’. now he is sadly dead, i can reveal i got the informatio­n from niki Lauda, no less, and he was the non- executive chairman of Mercedes at the time.

‘ sebastian is someone you can never discount,’ said Wolff yesterday when asked about bringing in the German. Hamilton has welcomed Vettel’s interest in joining, explored this week in his interview with sky.

Hamilton would. He knows Vettel, whose championsh­ipwinning salad days were at Red bull between 2010 and 2013, would be no threat to his legacy, his friend’s talent having waned. no question.

Fourteen wins in his six years at Ferrari was a meagre return. His nadir was binning it in Hockenheim in 2018 while leading his home race. He moved to aston Martin, his powers declining.

the point is he has left Formula One for a reason — he was done with it. He now says he misses the competitio­n, but not enough to have walked out on the sport to start with.

as for Mercedes’ future, they need rejuvenati­on, not a figure from the past. Ferrari’s Carlos sainz, winner in Melbourne only a fortnight ago, is a far more alluring prospect to partner George Russell.

Vettel, too, would grow annoyed by what will be a long game of rebuilding at the silver arrows. He is 36, a great chap, but retirement with his wife and three kids is where he should remain. a new beginning at Mercedes would work for neither side.

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