Saturday, 26 October 2013

Is Sebastian Vettel boring?

By Simon Wright - Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

Those who might be wondering where my regular Formula One race reports have gone since August’s dull and dreary Belgian Grand Prix, it is because my interest in the sport has waned on recent results. I’ve only seen one of the last four races and the chances of deciding to sleep and miss tomorrow morning’s Indian Grand Prix are relatively high.

Winning has become the norm for Sebastian Vettel in 2013
Another pole position, another win and another world championship loom for Red Bull’s German superstar Sebastian Vettel (pictured). If he achieves those aims at the Buddah International Circuit in the morning, it will be his 10th win of the season, his sixth in a row and a fourth successive drivers’ championship, with his team looking in a strong position to wrap up the constructors’ title too.

His recent dominance hasn’t been good for the sport and that is a fair comment. However, should fans accept that we are just watching one of Grand Prix’s ultimate legends carve his way through the records into greatness or do you feel that Sebastian Vettel is boring? (BBC 2011 Vettel video below)


There is no doubt that Vettel is a remarkable racing driver. 2013 is only his seventh full season in F1 and that means he will have been the title winner in over half of the campaigns he has competed. He has it all in his locker with the sheer speed over one lap backed up by the prowess to overtake, conserve the car and take the points if required, set blistering laps and turning this trademark into artistic motion, plus he goes around with a smile and a cool sense around the paddock – something evidently missing from Michael Schumacher in his prime.

Those who say that Vettel is only winning because he is in the best car need to eat their words. He is in the best car and this season’s Red Bull machinery is way better than any of the opposition have to offer. However if it was that good, his team-mate Mark Webber would finish second all the time too. They only have two 1-2 finishes this season – one last time out in Japan and the other was that stormy day in Malaysia when Vettel ignored team orders to win. The German is able to get the absolute maximum out of the car and the Pirelli tyres and that is why he is often at the front and winning races so regularly. That is the skill of a great driver. (BBC 2012 Vettel video below)


He has developed close relationships with the other key figures in the Red Bull team, team principal Christian Horner, advisor Helmut Marko and design supremo Adrian Newey and he has a firm grip on the way Pirelli work. When the Italian manufacturer were coming into the sport three years ago, Sebastian was the only driver to come and visit their headquarters, greet the newcomers and get to understand and know how the configuration would work under the new supplier. That isn’t an unfair advantage. That is the knowledge, research and dedication going into his work to ensure he stays on top. You have to admire him for that.

The constant booing of him on the podium this season has been frankly disgusting to overhear. Of course fans thought slightly differently of him after Malaysia and he lost some respect for that. I’ll admit that I cheered when his gearbox packed up at Silverstone forcing a rare DNF but that was out of spectacle for the race and to see a different winner, not for any of his Sepang actions. The fans pay the money to come and spectate and if they don’t decide to respect the winner, then what are they doing at the circuit? They should go and find something else to do on a Sunday afternoon if they can’t do anything better than just to boo. Any backlash from Kuala Lumpur ended months ago. Unless you are a Mark Webber fan, accept it and move on.

A word has to be said about the opposition too. They have self-destructed this season. Fernando Alonso’s relationship with Ferrari has taken a severe knock after some comments made in the aftermath of an uncompetitive showing at the Hungarian Grand Prix, while McLaren’s design team came up with such a pig’s ear of a car, it destroyed any ambitions Jenson Button had for a title tilt from the opening weekend. Perhaps Martin Whitmarsh better be careful not to call Vettel 'the crash kid' and focus on getting his designers back on track. Lewis Hamilton’s mind is often questioned as once again, he isn’t the same person he is when he is happy and settled with on-off girlfriend Nicole Scherzinger and Kimi Raikkonen is really in the sport for the money and nothing else. As funny as Kimi can be on the team radio (clip below), his lack of dedication and commitment will be shown up next season when he pits himself up against fellow champion Alonso at Ferrari.


When Schumacher was winning so much, his brother Ralf made an interesting point at the 2004 Chinese Grand Prix. When asked about whether it was boring that his brother kept taking the chequered flag first, his view was: “He is the best driver and he deserves to win, that’s the end of it. And it isn’t boring that he keeps winning, it is boring that no-one seems to be able to do anything about it, drivers’ maybe and cars for sure.”

That is exactly how I feel about the current situation. The drivers can only do as well as the machinery they have around them will allow them to – as Button can vouch for in 2013. The simple fact is Red Bull’s rivals have all built mediocre or inconsistent models that might be very quick on occasional weekends (Ferrari in China, Mercedes GP in Monaco and Hungary) but are not consistent enough throughout the season. That is why Red Bull and Vettel have such a clear advantage over the rest of the field.

So in answer to the earlier question, Sebastian Vettel is not boring, he is just a great driver who is putting his name alongside the likes of Fangio, Schumacher, Senna, Prost and Clark as among the best to have ever driven a Formula One racing car.

What I will say though is the spectacle in 2013 has been really boring to watch. I wouldn’t mind so much Vettel winning all the time if the racing down the field was exciting and action-packed. That hasn’t been the case this season and stories off-the-track like the team orders debacle in Malaysia and Pirelli’s exploding tyres at Silverstone have taken the firm headlines rather than any entertaining racing. The sport has become far too sanitised, with tyres not good enough to handle the variety of track surfaces and temperatures and the KERS/DRS combination which is making passing no longer an art but a formality. If you want to see regular overtaking nowadays, take a trip down the M1 and you’ll see better passing. With the new 2014 regulations of V6 engines and heavy fuel saving coming in only likely to make the spectacle even worse, these are difficult times for the passionate F1 fan who would like to see a better show but are unlikely to be rewarded.

There is more chance of Ed Miliband showing the touch of the common person than Sebastian Vettel not wrapping up his fourth championship on Sunday morning. Let’s hope there is some decent racing to make the occasion more of a damp squib, although I wouldn’t be rushing to put those alarm clocks on ready for the race in India. 

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