Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Vettel takes spin down the ratings

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FORMER world champion Nico Rosberg bel ieves Sebastia n Vettel is in a dark place a fte r c la i m i ng the German has lost h is No 1 status at Ferrari to Charles Leclerc.

Vettel will take part in the Singapore Grand Prix a week on Sunday, 13 points behind Leclerc in the championsh­ip following the 21-yearold Monegasque’s superlativ­e drive to victory in Monza.

As Leclerc lapped up the adulation of the Tifosi, quadruple world champion Vettel was reflecting on yet another torrid afternoon.

He spun for a second successive year at the Italian team’s home race before colliding with Lance Stroll and damaging his car. He was penalised with a 10-second-stop-and-go punishment, finishing 13th, a lap behind his team-mate.

“This moment must be so dark for Vettel,” said Rosberg.

“His team-mate just became an absolute Ferrari legend, taking his No 1 status in the team.

“It is unexplaina­ble for me. He is a four-time world champion, he is one of the best guys out there and to make a mistake like that, on your own, just spinning the car, is so strange.”

Publicly, Ferrari are standing by their £36 million-a-year driver, with chief exec Louis Camilleri, who was among the team’s bigwigs i n Monza to witness Vettel’s latest capitulati­on, insisting he will bounce back. “I don’t like the fact that people are trying to write off Seb,” he said. “He’s an amazing driver and I have every confidence that Seb’s going to come back.”

But privately, the Scuderia will be alarmed. Vettel is desperatel­y out of form, out of confidence, and might well be considerin­g his future.

His Ferrari contract expires at the end of next season, but the emergence of Leclerc may see him depart before then.

Vettel has not been able to add to his 52 victories i n more than a year.

Vettel should have triumphed at June’s Canadian Grand Prix, only to run off the road under pressure from Hamilton. He has been out-qualified by Leclerc at the following seven rounds.

During the same period, Leclerc has also scored three poles to Vettel’s zero, won twice, and accumulate­d 41 more points.

Leclerc saw off Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas, i n the sister Mercedes, to secure his second win in as many races on Sunday.

Leclerc was aggressive in his defence of first position, with Hamilton insisting he will speak to the Ferrari driver about his conduct.

But the five-time world champion, who holds a 63-point title lead with seven races left, says he does not harbour any ill feeling towards the rising star.

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