Hamilton, Vettel kick off race for fifth title at Australian Grand
Prix
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[March 21, 2018]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - The first
installment of what Formula One fans hope will be a genuine
season-long tussle kicks off on Sunday as four-times champions Lewis
Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel lock horns at the season-opening
Australian Grand Prix.
This year marks the first that two quadruple champions are competing
in the same season and their battle to see who joins Argentine
legend Juan Manuel Fangio in second place on the all-time list with
five titles promises to light up the series.
Michael Schumacher leads the way on seven world titles.
Hamilton emerged well on top for Mercedes at the end of 2017 after
Ferrari's Vettel made the early running, but their rivalry added
plenty of spice, the pair banging wheels on the track in Azerbaijan
and exchanging threats off it.
Hopes are high for more tense dueling to spark interest in a
championship that has generally proved a procession for the Silver
Arrows, who have swept the drivers' and constructors championships
in each of the past four years.
Much will depend on whether Ferrari's SF71H can keep German Vettel
within striking distance of Hamilton in his Mercedes W09, which the
Briton raved about during pre-season testing.
On that score, the jury is out.
Lap times at testing can be misleading but there remains a
conviction that Mercedes will head into Sunday's race at Albert
Park, as always, the team to beat.
"We know that Mercedes is a little bit ahead of everyone and is
dominating the sport for the last four years," McLaren's twice world
champion Fernando Alonso told Reuters on Wednesday.
"And they are the big favorites again to start the new season."
PERFECT TARGET
Mercedes are eager to see what the W09 can do at the lakeside
circuit in Melbourne, with technical director James Allison saying
it would "blow away" the W08 which garnered 12 race wins in 2017 and
a fourth consecutive constructors' title.
Hamilton, however, was guarded about their opening weekend
prospects, believing Red Bull could be as much a threat to the
Silver Arrows as Ferrari.
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Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany (R) watches on as
second-placed Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain holds up his
trophy. REUTERS/Brandon Malone
"I think at this time of the year everyone is trying to hype someone
else up and we are the perfect target because we are the world
champions," the Briton said at a Melbourne event with sponsor
Petronas on Wednesday.
"From what I understand, I think Red Bull and Ferrari are very
close. Potentially we are either level, just behind or maybe just
ahead of the Red Bulls as far as I'm aware."
Ferrari have kept a low profile in the lead-up to the race but home
hope and Red Bull driver Daniel Ricciardo emerged on Wednesday to
express hope for a "statement" performance.
"Every year, the team works hard to build a fast car but, come
testing, we've never really had much to show for it," the Australian
told reporters.
"This year, we obviously had a bit more so, from a team perspective,
we're feeling much more prepared."
There will be fingers crossed in the McLaren garage as Alonso and
Stoffel Vandoorne put the new Renault-powered car through its paces,
the once formidable outfit having split with Honda after three
miserable years.
Albert Park will see a number of debuts, with Formula Two's
Monegasque champion Charles Leclerc and Russian Sergey Sirotkin
having their first races for Sauber and Williams respectively.
The much-maligned halo, a cockpit head protection system, will also
make its race debut along with 'Grid Kids', aspiring young drivers
who have replaced the female models who paraded on track in seasons
past.
(Editing by John O'Brien)
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