{"id":569136,"date":"2019-05-10T13:18:23","date_gmt":"2019-05-10T12:18:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/articles\/opinion\/mph-sebastian-vettel-is-at-a-crossroads-in-f1"},"modified":"2019-12-05T02:29:08","modified_gmt":"2019-12-05T02:29:08","slug":"mph-sebastian-vettel-crossroads-f1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/articles\/single-seaters\/f1\/mph-sebastian-vettel-crossroads-f1\/","title":{"rendered":"MPH: Sebastian Vettel is at a crossroads in F1"},"content":{"rendered":"

Sebastian Vettel is nearing the key part of his 2019 Formula 1 season \u2013 and future in the sport<\/b><\/p>\n

\"Vettel<\/b><\/p>\n

Image: Ferrari<\/i><\/p>\n

There is something a little different about Sebastian Vettel\u2019<\/a>s manner at the moment, a sort of serenity which seems at odds with what would appear to be a career crossroads \u2013 but which might actually be because of it.<\/p>\n

Vettel\u2019s usually chirpy, smiling persona is only a thin veneer right now. Just beneath is what, if you didn\u2019t know better, might be described as resigned indifference. It was very apparent in his TV interview with Martin Brundle<\/a> recently. Asked what he thought his legacy might be, he fired back with, \u201cI don\u2019t know, I don\u2019t care.\u201d Not in an aggressive way, but in a manner suggesting that he genuinely doesn\u2019t, that he\u2019s perhaps finding it difficult to take much meaning from it all.<\/p>\n

On the eve of the race at the track in which he and Ferrari looked so strong in pre-season testing, he arrives not only from those four Mercedes 1-2 results but also the competitively strained situation with team-mate Charles Leclerc<\/a>. Each time the Ferrari has been fast \u2013 Bahrain<\/a>, Baku<\/a> \u2013 Leclerc\u2019s underlying pace has been stronger, and not by a small margin. Nor a margin that, if regularly repeated, would be consistent with Vettel retaining his nominal team leadership status. On the other hand, Vettel was the quicker Ferrari driver in both Melbourne<\/a> and Shanghai<\/a>, so it\u2019s not as if the writing on the wall is really decipherable as yet.<\/p>\n

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It\u2019s a far less flexible style than that of Leclerc.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

How he fares now in the quick-fire rhythm of the \u2018European\u2019 part of the season could be key to his whole future. This is dependent not only on Ferrari\u2019s ability to develop the SF90<\/a> into a Mercedes match but whether it can do so in a way that allows Vettel to express his natural driving style \u2013 which, as we\u2019ve seen over the years, is highly dependent on having a car with a lot of rear stability; a car like Ferrari has given him in the last two years.<\/p>\n

Give him such a car and he finds big chunks of time on corner entry into slow and medium speed corners with his sudden, pitching turn-in. The greater the rear grip, the greater his advantage over more conventional techniques. But take that away from him \u2013 and he struggles. It\u2019s a far less flexible style than that of Leclerc.<\/p>\n


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