Whanganui Chronicle

‘Close to perfection’ — Vettel hails Ferrari

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For Sebastian Vettel, the opening day of the Formula One preseason couldn’t have gone any better.

Vettel, the runner-up to the title last season, clocked the fastest time, was the busiest driver with 169 laps and, most importantl­y, felt right at home behind the wheel of his new Ferrari.

“We couldn’t have hoped for a better day,” Vettel said after setting a session-best lap time of 1 minute, 18.161 seconds in Montmelo, Spain. “It was unbelievab­le. The car was working very well. We had no issues slowing us down.

“It is obviously very early and this will be meaningles­s in a couple of weeks, but for now, a huge compliment to everyone at the factory. What they put on the track today was very close to perfection.”

Vettel has the daunting goal of ending Mercedes’ five-year dominance of F1.

Defending champion Lewis Hamilton shared time behind the wheel for Mercedes with Valtteri Bottas and ended up with the ninth-fastest time, but it is likely that Mercedes were not aiming to top the leaderboar­d.

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff acknowledg­ed that Ferrari looked quick, but downplayed the importance of lap times in the preseason. “That is not what tests are about,” Wolff said. “It’s about going through all the parts and looking at all the data.”

Carlos Sainz put in the secondquic­kest lap in his first ride with McLaren, followed by Haas’ Romain Grosjean and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo, who joined the team from Red Bull, and Nico Hulkenberg put in the slowest times of the day, finishing more than 2.8 seconds slower than Vettel.

Williams, who finished last in the team standings last year, missed the first day of testing and are likely to miss today’s session as well.

Alfa Romeo, previously known as Sauber, unveiled their new burgundy-and-white car in the pit lane before testing began. Kimi Raikkonen, who joined the team from Ferrari, had the fifth-best time but also went off the track twice without damaging his car.

The main focus of these tests is for teams to adapt to rule changes for their cars’ front wing design. The goal is to make racing more exciting by facilitati­ng overtaking. The new regulation­s should reduce the turbulence hitting trailing cars, which has slowed them and made passing difficult.

Red Bull boss Chris Horner said that the new rules mean “there is a blank canvas this year”.

Testing will continue until Friday and again from February 26-March 1 at the Barcelona-Catalunya Circuit, home to the Spanish Grand Prix in May.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Sebastian Vettel and the Ferrari team are desperate to break Mercedes’ fiveyear strangleho­ld on Formula One.
Photo / AP Sebastian Vettel and the Ferrari team are desperate to break Mercedes’ fiveyear strangleho­ld on Formula One.

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