by Lewis Wells
Lewis Hamilton vs
Sebastian Vettel. Mercedes vs Ferrari. Germany vs Italy.
Two contrasting
personalities, nationalities, backgrounds: yet the same level of status within
the F1 community, one might argue. Both with an astounding collection of world
championship titles each, as well as wins, pole positions, but essentially
their trademark approaches, comments and behaviours. What a pity it took so
long for such a fight to occur. Up until now, a direct fight between the two
has not taken place, for the coincidental reasons of representing different
teams, at different times of their evolution, thus the possibility of being
competitive can be quite vague.
As both assertive,
in-demand and ‘controlling’ drivers, having both Hamilton and Vettel on the
same team remains a distant dream. Yet as they both commit their futures to
both Mercedes and Ferrari respectively, and as they remain the most financed,
structurally supported, and most recently successful teams, it is likely 2017
marks the start of a new F1 era, not just a blemish on the competition.
Character
For anyone
unfamiliar with the general mindsets and characters of the two drivers, allow
me to digress into their key traits.
Hamilton is driven by the efforts, sacrifices
and adversities his family overcame to put him where he is today. His social
media portfolios are evident of his commitment to the continuation of thanking
those who support/ have supported him. Thus so, his repetitive radio messages
during races, of which seem scripted or naturally built in even, (Thank you so
much for all your hard work back at the factory!), or our constant reminding of
his boxing ring episodes in childhood, or karting scenes, gives the impression
of an extremely emotional and highly motivated individual. That being said, we
are reminded that he does not love F1, and how he longs for a post-racing
career in the musical industry, or potentially within fashion, film, or all of
the above! His affiliation with high profile celebrities has commanded him a
level of popularity not seen since that of Michael Schumacher.
I personally
believe he enjoys F1 as an outlet he can always rely on, and always have with
him, alongside his other excursions. In my opinion, his partying and
controversial off-track choices are paramount to the stability of his character
on-track and although seldom supported by former drivers and many journalists,
he continues to perform. He was set on achieving the 2017 title ever since he
lost it to mechanical failure. Knowing that he was capable of a greater fight,
Lewis committed himself to maximising every opportunity this year, regardless
of its perceived value, as hindsight can be a tricky concept.
Vettel, a German
who idolised Michael Schumacher, is less revealing of his childhood and journey
towards F1, yet he remains appreciative and humble. He does indeed love F1, and
speaks very highly of his love of racing, period. He lives in the countryside
in Switzerland, and is often quoted mentioning the love he possesses for his
family and his vehicles, for which he has BMWs, Mercedes, Ferraris, but also a
secondary admiration and collection for motorbikes. His life is primarily
orientated around his career, and thus one may argue has fewer outlets of
release and enjoyment outside of his family sphere, compared to Hamilton. How
do we know? For he “sees no point” in Social Media, thus we are left to develop
our opinions from his sole appearances and interviews, trackside.
His defeat this
year did not warrant any emotional outpour, instead a reaffirming commitment to
establishing future dominance. He was aware he was set to lose the title, many
weeks prior to the eventual result. He also assures himself that, “not many
have achieved what I have already”, referencing his 4 consecutive world titles,
and thus possibly believes the fate of his year has been down proportionally to
between himself and the team, which I will explore later.
Composure
Hamilton is
naturally quick. He is the sport’s most successful polesitter, commanding an
astonishing 72 pole positions, and his recollection of track qualities is
evident from his firm questioning in Driver Q&A sessions, “Why has this
changed?”, “Can we drive there?”. It is clear he relies more on his
natural-born traits and values of bravery, commitment and practise to deliver
his performances. Thus, we have seen the occasional disadvantage in his
psychological mindset, as he constantly thinks of the other driver, the
competitor, and seems unable to find “the zone” which renders these disruptive
thoughts null and void. When displaying a particular emotion, it is evident
from his body language, tone, rate of answer and engagement with fans.
He is clearly very
dynamic. He arguably had the upper skill when battling Rosberg 2014–2015, yet
this fell to Rosberg during 2016. He picked himself up psychologically to
enable him to physically defeat Vettel in 2017.
Vettel is logical,
mathematical and inquisitive. He is very repetitive in his style, his approach
in terms of braking and acceleration are signature. He is always asking for
ways to improve, for the data and evidence, knowing where he fell short and
reaffirming his absence of perfections. It is true that, his expletive-laden
rants on the radio are as a result of his large fondness for winning and
delivering for his team. It is perhaps here where, like Hamilton has in the
past, slipped up in terms of maintaining a calm, collected approach to driving,
regardless of the difficulty one has encountered, or is encountering.
He is always
joking, shaking drivers’ hands, never boosting himself onto a pedestal. He is
always humble of his successes, and seeks to make civil relationships with
those around him. Yet he lost this year. Does he need to find something else,
that winning edge? Or does he need to “get into his head”, as Rosberg told F1
Racing Magazine regarding Hamilton, of his own reformed approach.
Consequence
Race by Race, each
comprising of varying challenges and adversities, provided us a stark image of
both these drivers and their teams.
Australia offered
us a revitalised Ferrari, whom were able to capitalise on a dormant Mercedes,
by providing Vettel a pit-stop strategy that would see him able to pass
Hamilton without performing a genuine on-track overtake. For a team regarded as
one of the worse for strategy and in-race decision making, this broke the
mould.
China showed us a
flipped result, with the two key drivers switching to Hamilton (1st) and Vettel
(2nd). The contest was getting perhaps too civil and peaceful and bets were
cast over the conclusion of this rather tedious period of calm.
Towards Bahrain,
the outsider being Hamilton’s teammate, Valtteri Bottas, stormed towards pole
position, but once again, the resurgent strategical department at Ferrari found
an opportunity and embraced it, overtaking him and taking the victory with
Vettel.
Russia was perhaps,
too good to be true (from Qualifying). Ferrari had both their drivers on the
front row of the grid for qualifiying, the first time such a feat has been
achieved by them since 2008. A storming Bottas overtook the both of them and
secured his first win. It was a lacklustre race, marked only by how close
Vettel was able to get to Bottas on the final lap.
Spain saw Ferrari
unable to defend from Hamilton with Vettel as they ran an inferior strategy
with their tires. Regardless of raw pace and talent, tires are a realistic
image of how your later result could pan out, the driver being left hopeless.
What we are seeing however so far is a consistent Vettel, perhaps not winning,
but always finishing on the rostrum (the top three) — can
one complain?
Monaco saw Ferrari
mischeviously offer Vettel the opportunity at victory by failing to inform his
teammate Raikkonen of his faltering pace and imminent race-leading demotion.
Can this be defined as engineering the result? If Ferrari wanted to protect
Raikkonen’s lead, they could have. So one may interpret it as such, but what we
can definitely infer is that Vettel has established himself the primary
position within the team and thus preferential treatment.
Canada saw Vettel
make the first of a number of crucial errors. Although arguably difficult to
avoid, and subjective, Vettel’s failure to break resulted in contact with an
intruding car and thus placed him at the back of the race. He was able to work
his back onto the podium, but he may have had the chance to win.
Azerbaijan was
above all, one of the most crucial races of the year. After misjudging the
unnecessary action of Hamilton in reducing his speed, Vettel drove into
Hamilton to exemplify his anger and frustration. This faux pas was met with a
timed penalty, warranting him unable to potentially win the race. His denial of
the evident action was eventually corrected, but not before his team had
something to say on the matter, where they were forced to question Vettel’s
value at Ferrari, whether “he had earned his place”. This is developing the
“what might have been” story.
Austria was a mere
repeat of Russia, where Vettel was within under a second distance of 1st place,
but perhaps his focus on enticing the stewards to investigate a jump start of
Bottas, who started 1st, left him flustered and unable to contend for a win.
Great Britain saw
Vettel lead the majority of the race in 4th place, yet a spectacular failure of
his tyres, not of his own doing, left him fighting for 7th. What struck me was
his maintainted calm and composure, he told us “that the championship is won at
the end”. Of course Seb, but this can’t help contribute to that.
Hungary saw Vettel
lead the race from start to finish, albeit a steering issue that rendered him
unable to develop a gap from the challenging Mercedes cars. Ferrari engineered
his victory by ensuring Raikkonen would ditch his ulterior motive of winning
the race, as an overtake would be far easier, by bolstering Vettel and keeping
firm bay between them and the other cars. Vettel can be very sure of a
submissive and supportive teammate, as Raikkonen has already won a world title
with Ferrari, whereas Hamilton may not always be able to claim such an
easygoing teammate.
Belgium saw Ferrari
and Vettel perform under expectation, yet this was simply limited to car
performance and not any specific error. Hamilton was able to command this race,
and I evidently remember his uplifted mood and enjoyment of the weekend, as
Vettel struggled to catch him.
Italy, the home of
Ferrari, was unable to seal Vettel a victory. It is often the case that
Ferrari’s car is more suited to slower, smaller corners and that Mercedes are
more suited to larger, longer corners with straight sections of track. Thus,
Monza suits the profile of Hamilton’s car much more. Vettel could only manage
3rd, after an unfortuante qualifying which exposed the weakness of his car in
wet conditions, leaving him 8th.
Singapore was
perhaps peak sorrow and heartbreak, from a Ferrari Fan, a Vettel Fan and
possibly an entire F1 Fan’s perspective. Already plagued on some occasions by
unfortunate events, the perhaps “too defensive” and “unnecessary” move by
Vettel to defend his leading position from another driver, despite it being
perfectly acceptable to finish lower down given the success he has had with
consistency this season, cost him a race win. Out of a race we all expected,
and knew, he could win, and should have won. Hamilton, a driver we did not
expect, and knew, were unlikely to win, won. Thus we have a championship battle
decided upon chance and mistake so far, not quite the “duel to end all duels”
we had all originally forecast and obviously would prefer to a battle fought by
failures and mistakes.
Malaysia saw Vettel
plagued by an unfortunate engine failure in the electronics department, a
somewhat avoidable incident that rendered him unable to contest in Qualifying.
His failure was mirrored by his teammate the following day, highlighting the
common problem among the car and perhaps inadequate response in the form of
solution and in the first place, prevention of occurence.
In Japan, a spark
plug, merely 4 inches high and an inch wide, costing only 56 euros, rendered
Vettel without substantial amounts of power, useless and unable to defend
himself on track. Retirement. Game over? As a Sport we love delving into
mathematical possiblities, to say the least. It’s likely impossible for this
driver to win, but if he finishes here, and these 3 drivers finish in these 3
respective positions, it’s game on. Etc. Etc. Still, it gives us a remnant of
enthusiasm.
The USA highlighted
the unfortunate lack of capacity for Vettel to overtake Hamilton, yet he
remained in close proximity for the duration of the race. At times, it appears
as if Vettel didn’t have enough pace, and were unable to control his tyres to
the same extent as Lewis, but Ferrari did their best to present him a 200m
opportunity to overtake as a result of their continued, improved strategical
decision making. It was in the USA that Lewis first had the opportunity to win
the title, but this was denied by Vettel’s strong but arguably little impact finish.
To conclude the
title battle, a race that summed up, in my mind, the events of this tumultuous
and anti-climatic, abstract season. Mexico. Vettel attained pole position. We
are starting to see a Vettel capitalise on events when it is most important. In
contrast, when under pressure, Hamilton performs, here he was most certainly
not under pressure. Thus, 3rd place he managed. In the first corner, Vettel
misjudged the proximity of two other cars and subsequently collided with them,
damaging the front wing and sideboard of his car. Having pitted, alongside
Hamilton, they both drove from the back. How comical. Hamilton was able to
manage 9th, all he had to do was finish, whilst Vettel needed to finish in the
top 2. He was able to manage 4th, and the allowance of his third placed
teammate to move would not have granted him easier access to contention for
2nd. Thus, albeit unceremoniously, Hamilton became world champion.Conclusion
In conclusion, from
the events of the season I have explored in relative detail, one can infer that
the key faults in Vettel’s season lie with his inability to match the speed of
Hamilton in Qualifiying sessions, his misjudgments and accidental, costly,
collisions, with a side of untimely mechanical failure and team chaos.
But do I believe
that he was able to win this year? Absolutely. This is where perhaps Hamilton
has a psychological edge, a hunger edge, an edge in training and management of
the entire process.
Do I believe that
2017 is a realistic, truthful representation of a Hamilton-Vettel title
contest? One is unable to present a large argument against this motion. Both
cars were, for the majority of the events this year, equal and with mutual
potential. Thus, the battle lied with the skill and capability of the driver,
for which we have seen their strengths and weaknesses, (for which they both
claim to know of each other, quite comprehensively). Should Ferrari’s new
appointment of Maria Mendoza, as Head of Trackside Quality Control, reduce any
avoidable mechanical woes, and if both teams continue to develop their cars on
a similar timescale as last year, with the same hunger and manpower, 2018 may
be a better representation. But it has primarily been a pleasure and a relief
to experience a contest between two drivers more suited to be rivals than
childhood friends and team-mates Lewis and Nico, two drivers for which we have
yet to see a conclusive, strikingly clear declaration of who is superior.
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