Evening Telegraph (First Edition)
Sainz determined to go out fighting with Ferrari
CARLOS Sainz is refusing to throw in the towel at such an early stage of the Formula One season – insisting he has “nothing to lose” in his last year at Ferrari.
After Max Verstappen led home a dominant Red Bull onetwo in Sunday’s Japanese Grand Prix, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff said the Dutchman was uncatchable this year.
Having clinched the previous three drivers’ titles, Verstappen is once again the overwhelming favourite to claim the crown.
He has won three of the opening four races, with a brake failure causing him to retire early on at the Australian Grand Prix last month – where Sainz went on to take the chequered flag.
The Spaniard was back in action after missing the Saudi Arabia Grand Prix with appendicitis and, having finished third behind the Red Bulls of Verstappen and Sergio
Perez at Suzuka, he was not ready to cede the fight.
In what will be the longest season in F1 history – there are still 20 races left with four having been run – Sainz is hopeful Ferrari can improve.
“I think they are definitely going to have an advantage in the first third of the season until we bring one or two upgrades that makes us fight them more consistently,” he said. “By that time, maybe it’s a bit too late with the advantage that they might have on the championship. In the meantime, we need more Australias! Which I don’t see Red Bull, as a team, making these mistakes very often.
“It is a shame, because also I missed a race, which for both the team and me, it could be costly in the championship.
“It’s my last year in Ferrari also, so yeah, nothing to lose and we will try everything to make it back.”