Paul Jeffrey
Premium
Sebastian Vettel had a race to forget at Suzuka today, finishing in an eventful sixth position that all but ended any realistic hopes of taking the 2018 World Championship back to Maranello. Vettel would be hampered right from the off, the Ferrari driver having to start from a disappointing ninth place following a wrong tyre choice in qualifying, leaving the German in fighting mood ahead of what would turn out to be a pivotal Grand Prix in the race for the 2018 World Championship.
Enjoying a strong start as rival Lewis Hamilton romped away in the lead, Vettel would soon find himself of the tail of a fierce Verstappen / Räikkönen duel, one where Verstappen would have himself an off track excursion that lead to contact with the second Ferrari, enough of a delay to allow Vettel past his team mate and into a position where the four time Champion would be able to make that ill fated move to pass the Red Bull man.
Enjoying a pace advantage, Vettel would make a move up the inside of Verstappen into the difficult Spoon Curve, contacting the Red Bull and spinning Vettel to the rear of the field and effectively out of contention for a race win in Japan.
Verstappen would escape the incident without losing a place, or receiving a penalty on top of the five second reprimand for contact with the second Ferrari, something that Vettel thinks was unjust as he firmly placed the blame at the foot of the 21-year-old Dutchman.
Following the conclusion of a Grand Prix that practically ended any further hopes of championship success, Vettel would go on to suggest the move was a legitimate one, spoilt by some unreasonable driving from his Red Bull rival:
"I was obviously pushing to get past but I wasn't desperate to get past," Vettel told Sky Sports F1.
"I knew he had a penalty but I also felt that we were faster. The gap was there but as soon as he saw me obviously he defended. But I had the inside.
"As soon as he realises somebody is close or next to him, he tries to - in my opinion - push when you shouldn't push anymore.
"Look at [the incident with] Kimi, [Verstappen]'s off the track and he comes back and if Kimi just drives on they'd collide.
"But it's not always right that the other guy has to move. We're all racing, the race is long."
Having only managed to recover to sixth position, Vettel must now avoid letting Hamilton out score him by more than eight points if he wants to prolong his 2018 championship battle."As soon as he realises somebody is close or next to him, he tries to - in my opinion - push when you shouldn't push anymore.
"Look at [the incident with] Kimi, [Verstappen]'s off the track and he comes back and if Kimi just drives on they'd collide.
"But it's not always right that the other guy has to move. We're all racing, the race is long."
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