Business Day

Webber did not deserve to win, says Vettel

- ALAN BALDWIN Shanghai

FORMULA One world champion Sebastian Vettel met a barrage of questions yesterday ahead of the Chinese Grand Prix this weekend, about his failure to obey team orders, with an unrepentan­t smile and cold contempt for Red Bull team-mate Mark Webber.

Facing a scrum of reporters crammed into his team’s hospitalit­y centre at the Chinese Grand Prix, Vettel showed little apparent remorse for his failure to obey orders by snatching victory from Webber in Malaysia last month.

There was no “war” between the team-mates, he said, but no real trust either. The Australian, added the German in a 20-minute long expla- nation, had not deserved to win.

Vettel said he had not understood the order to hold station, issued in coded form as “multi-21”, but would probably have ignored it even if he had fully comprehend­ed.

“Had I understood the message, then I think I would have thought about it, reflected on what it means, what the team wants me to do, to leave Mark in first place and me finishing second. And I think I would have thought about it and probably done the same thing because Mark doesn’t deserve that.”

Pressed by Reuters on why he felt Webber, who had obeyed instructio­ns to turn down the engine and look after the tyres, had not deserved to win, Vettel replied bluntly: “I don’t like to talk ill of other people. It’s not my style. I think I said enough. The bottom line is that I was racing, I was faster, I passed him, I won.”

The tone of the encounter was set from the first question, inquiring how he felt to be the “bad guy” after previously being the “good guy”.

“I don’t consider myself the bad guy,” replied the 25-year-old, who said on Wednesday that he had apologised to the team after the race for his act of disobedien­ce but not for winning. Asked whether he could still count on Webber’s support later in the season, Vettel smiled: “Being completely honest, I never have support from his side. I’ve got a lot of support from the team and I think the team is supporting both of us the same way.

“I respect him a lot as a racing driver but I think there were more than one occasion in the past where he could have helped the team and he didn’t.

“I wouldn’t call it trust, to be honest,” Vettel said of their pairing. “I think we have a profession­al relationsh­ip.”

Vettel denied principal Christian Horner’s authority had been seriously undermined and laughed off a question about whether the team had punished the driver.

“There’s a lot of marks on my back,” he grinned, to laughter, before the steel broke through the velvet glove as the questions continued. “I did apologise and I meant it. Sanction as in punishment? Maybe it’s a little bit of dreamland that you all live in,” said the man who has chalked up three titles in a row as the youngest triple champion. “What do you expect to happen?” Reuters

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