A perplexed Sebastian Vettel was left scratching his head after the promise of Ferrari’s pre-season testing performance was shattered by the pace of Mercedes during qualifying on Saturday for the Australian Grand Prix. Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton claimed a record-extending eighth pole at Albert Park, edging teammate Valtteri Bottas in a Mercedes one-two as the Silver Arrows gave Ferrari a stinging reality check.
Third fastest Vettel was more than seven-tenths of a second slower than Hamilton, a gap similar to last year’s qualifying when the Briton blew former Ferrari driver Kimi Raikkonen out of the water.
Runners-up to Mercedes in the last two constructors’ championships, Ferrari arrived in Melbourne with confidence for the new season after being slightly faster during winter testing.
But Barcelona must have felt very far away for Vettel, who was at a loss to explain the sudden and glaring gap, “I think, there is still a bit of margin [to improve] but certainly the gap is there today, and it was a surprise."
“We didn’t expect it coming here but now it is that way. Obviously, there is a lack somewhere, because we are too slow – but didn’t feel like it,” the four-times F1 World Champion told reporters.
Vettel’s new teammate Charles Leclerc qualified fifth fastest behind Red Bull’s Max Verstappen but the highly regarded 21-year-old was harder on himself than the car.
“I’m not happy with myself. I didn’t do the job in Q3, which is a shame,” said the Monegasque, who locked up in turn one of a “messy” second lap."
“I’ve been struggling quite a lot last year on this track so I’m pretty sure things will get better but I also need to work on my side to put the things together when I have to. It’s a shame. I think top three was definitely there, top two not. But we will work to get better.”
While Hamilton claimed pole for a sixth time in succession at Albert Park, Vettel won the last two races in Australia despite conceding plenty of pace to Mercedes’ cars.
Fortune and a safety car deployment helped him pip Hamilton last year and a well-timed pit-stop sealed victory over the Briton in 2017.
Despite the qualifying setback, Vettel said he felt Ferrari had a “good race car” and could still take maximum points on Sunday.
He added, “Obviously Mercedes are the clear favourites after the result today and the pace they have shown so far. But we are here to race. This track is very specific, so not worried too much, but for sure it’s not great. I would have loved for it to be the other way round.”
Big Question: Will Ferrari bounce back like they did last year?