The sport's oldest, most glamorous and
successful team announced the move in a statement on Tuesday
after talks on a new contract ended without a deal.
"This is a decision taken jointly by ourselves and Sebastian,
one which both parties feel is for the best," said Ferrari
principal Mattia Binotto.
"It was not an easy decision to reach, given Sebastian’s worth
as a driver and as a person."
Vettel joined in 2015 with the dream of emulating boyhood hero
and seven times champion Michael Schumacher in winning titles in
the famous red cars.
Where the 32-year-old will go, whether he will remain in a sport
whose delayed season has yet to start, and who might replace him
are the big questions now.
"In order to get the best possible results in this sport, it’s
vital for all parties to work in perfect harmony," said Vettel.
"The team and I have realised that there is no longer a common
desire to stay together beyond the end of this season.
"Financial matters have played no part in this joint decision.
That’s not the way I think when it comes to making certain
choices and it never will be."
"What’s been happening in these past few months has led many of
us to reflect on what are our real priorities in life," added
the father of three, referring to the COVID-19 pandemic that has
sent countries around the world into lockdown.
Vettel said he would now take time "to reflect on what really
matters when it comes to my future".
TIME TO SPLIT
German media, who flagged up the departure on Monday night,
reported that he had rejected the terms being offered.
They suggested Vettel, who won 14 races with the team and is
their third-most successful driver, had been offered only a
one-year extension with a salary reduction.
Ferrari had said the German, who won his titles with Red Bull
from 2010-13, was their first choice to partner Charles Leclerc
in 2021.
Binotto said there was no one reason for the split "apart from
the common and amicable belief that the time had come to go our
separate ways in order to reach our respective objectives".
Leclerc, who won two races last year and is only 22, has a
contract until 2024 and is seen as the future of a team that
last won a driver's title with Kimi Raikkonen in 2007.
The Monegasque outperformed Vettel last year in his first season
at Ferrari, finishing ahead of him overall and taking more
points, poles, podiums and wins.
"It's been a huge honor for me to be your team mate," Leclerc
said on Twitter.
"We've had some tense moments on tracks, some very good ones and
some others that didn't end as we both wanted, but there was
always respect, even though it wasn't perceived this way from
the outside.
"I've never learnt so much as I did with you as my teammate.
Thank you for everything Seb."
Australian Daniel Ricciardo, at Renault, and McLaren's Spaniard
Carlos Sainz have been installed as the leading candidates to
take one of the most coveted seats on the grid.
Six-times world champion Lewis Hamilton has also been linked
with Ferrari but has repeatedly indicated he intends to stay
with Mercedes.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin; Editing by Pritha Sarkar, Ed Osmond
and Hugh Lawson)
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