Vettel hoping to 'maximise' result in Spain
Sebastian Vettel is focused on “maximising” his results rather than dwelling on his Formula 1 title prospects at such an early stage of 2018.
Vettel heads into this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix four points behind chief title rival Lewis Hamilton, despite appearing to have the best package of the 2018 field beneath him in the shape of Ferrari’s SF71H.
Sebastian Vettel is focused on “maximising” his results rather than dwelling on his Formula 1 title prospects at such an early stage of 2018.
Vettel heads into this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix four points behind chief title rival Lewis Hamilton, despite appearing to have the best package of the 2018 field beneath him in the shape of Ferrari’s SF71H.
The German won the opening two rounds of the season but was hit by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in China and dropped to eighth, before losing ground while trying to reclaim the lead from Valtteri Bottas during crazy a race in Baku, where he finished fourth as Hamilton claimed a surprise win.
"I think so far we can be pretty happy, have been pretty competitive, had a chance to fight for the win in most of the races we did so far,” Vettel said.
“I mean there’s so many races to go it’s pointless to talk about the fight for the championship. At the moment I think it’s the fight to maximise every single race result, pretty straight forward for a long time, then towards the end of the season a lot of you will remind us that we’re still in the hunt.
“But before that there’s not much point, get points, and things like this, natural you want to finish a race, natural you want to win a race, if you can get the best result every weekend you’re racing, if that brings you a position to fight for the championship that’s good news.”
Mercedes threatened to continue its dominance of the V6 hybrid era in Australia as Hamilton claimed a dominant pole and boasted the fastest car in race-trim, but an ill-timed Virtual Safety Car period enabled Vettel to leapfrog the Briton.
The German manufacturer has struggled to repeat a similar level of performance since the season-opener and has ultimately fallen behind Ferrari in the constructors’ championship, while Red Bull has also made strides and was victorious in China.
“I think honest answer is Australia Mercedes was the fastest car, the best package, I think after that in racing I think it was a tie between us, Mercedes and Red Bull to be honest,” Vettel replied when asked how he saw 2018’s current competitive order.
“In qualifying I think we did what we were supposed to do and I think other people maybe had some trouble, I don’t understand sometimes the form on Friday versus Saturday, for example in Baku why Red Bull was so quick on Friday and not quick on Saturday but then they were back to where they were in terms of pace on Sunday.
“Going through our weekend sometimes you feel more comfortable in the car, sometimes less, trying to fine tune set-ups, so I think it is as a fact very tight at the top and small things can make a big difference on the day.
“We’re here we get a round of updates for everybody, see where it takes us, quite nice if you start first, or even sixth, and you know that you can fight for the win in terms of pure pace. It’s good for people watching as you don’t know what’s going to happen.”