No annual break for fading Ferrari
HOCKENHEIM: Ferrari head into Formula One’s annual break facing a tall order to turn things around in time for the second half of a season that promised much but has so far delivered little.
Formula One’s most successful team went into the season with ambitions of challenging dominant Mercedes for race wins and the championship, after rebounding from their first winless campaign in more than two decades with three wins last year.
The Italian squad, revitalised by new management and the arrival of fourtime champion Sebastian Vettel, was the only team to break Mercedes’ stranglehold on the top of the podium in 2015.
But they head into the summer break, just past the halfway stage of a record 21race season, still without a win and having dropped to third in the standings behind rivals Red Bull following Sunday’s German Grand Prix.
“I have to say that they improved quite well,” team principal Maurizio Arrivabene told reporters following the race in Hockenheim.
“It doesn’t mean we are going to surrender. During this period we have to think and to react.”
Ferrari started the year strongly, challenging for the win in the seasonopener in Australia.
But a serious titletilt never materialised and as the season has worn on even the podiums, of which Ferrari scored eight in the first nine races, have dried up.
The sudden departure of the team’s highly regarded technical director James Allison in the build up to Sunday’s race has only caused more upheaval and could deal their campaign a further blow.
Red Bull, meanwhile, have taken giant strides forward.
The Milton Keynesbased outfit overturned what was a 37point deficit into a 14point advantage in the space of just four races with a doublepodium on Sunday, when the best Ferrari could manage was a fifth and sixth.
“We were just not fast enough,” said Kimi Raikkonen, who won Ferrari’s last world championship in 2007.
“Everybody can see where we finished and it’s obviously a bit painful for all of us. But this is how it is right now and we just have to work hard and improve.” — Reuters