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Austrian Grand Prix will show if Hamilton-Vettel rift has healed

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SPIELBERG, Austria: Formula One’s governing body is confident that the most controvers­ial moment of a gripping title race is officially resolved, after Sebastian Vettel completed the formality of publicly apologizin­g to archrival Lewis Hamilton for driving dangerousl­y.

This weekend’s Austrian Grand Prix will show if the rift between the fiercely competitiv­e multiple world champions has really been healed, or whether the pressure of race day could bring it back out into the open on Sunday.

Vettel, who has four world titles to Hamilton’s three, escaped further punishment from the FIA this week after they ordered a review of his deliberate collision with Hamilton at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix two weeks ago. An irate Vettel swerved into Hamilton, albeit at slow speed, because he thought the British driver had slammed his brakes on recklessly late, right in front of him, seconds earlier.

It was another incident that underlined how, despite 45 Grand Prix wins, the vastly experience­d Vettel is prone to moments of uncontroll­ed volatility. Yet Hamilton, for all his brilliant driving, retains a steely edge to his driving that some — such as Vettel and Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg over the last three years — consider overly provocativ­e.

Despite the view that he was in the wrong in Baku, Vettel effectivel­y escaped with a slap on the wrist.

Having met with Vettel and Ferrari’s team principal Maurizio Arrivabene at its headquarte­rs in Paris, and with the addition of an apology from the German driver on his personal website, FIA president Jean Todt deemed that the time penalty given to Vettel during the race was sufficient punishment.

Vettel leads him by 14 points after eight races, so the apology arguably makes little difference in terms of the standings.

Hamilton’s Mercedes team, curiously restrained in its criticism of Vettel two weeks ago, is trying to tackle different issues.

“Every great Formula One season is marked by a great rivalry,” Mercedes’ head of motorsport Toto Wolff said. “As calm as it started, it was only a matter of time until the rivalry would eventually become more fierce and controvers­ial.

“We have moved past that moment now and it is a closed chapter,” Wolff continued. “Our focus since Baku has been on our own shortcomin­gs, reviewing both the design and procedures around our headrest which cost Lewis the win two weeks ago.”

The heated clash took the spotlight away from the fact that Hamilton arguably missed out on victory — finishing one spot behind fourth-place Vettel — because he had to change his car’s faulty headrest at the same time Vettel was in the pit lane serving out his time penalty.

Mercedes has dominated recent seasons, but 2017 has been difficult for the team.

Mercedes has notably had to deal with tire issues related to the disparity between the front and rear axels causing an imbalance highlighte­d in practice and qualifying.

“The sweet spot (of the car) is still difficult to find,” Wolff said. “Clearly, we are not the only team who took time to understand the combinatio­n of the new regulation­s and tires.”

 ??  ?? German Formula One Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel, center, inspects racetrack ahead of the Austrian Formula One Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Austria, on Thursday. (AFP)
German Formula One Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel, center, inspects racetrack ahead of the Austrian Formula One Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Austria, on Thursday. (AFP)

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