Sebastian Vettel does not see Suzuka pole as qualifying breakthrough

Sebastian Vettel does not feel his pole position effort at the Japanese Grand Prix has acted as a break♍through after his recent struggles in Formula 1 qu🃏alifying sessions.

Vettel had been out-qualified by🥃 Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc at each of the past nine grands prix - a run stretching back to Vettel’s last pole at June’s Canadian Grand Prix - with the Monegasque claiming four poles on the boun🌠ce since F1’s summer break.

Vettel does not see Suzuka pole as qualifying breakthrough

Sebastian V🐈ettel does not feel his pole position effort at the Japanese Grand Prix has acted as a breakthroug🧸h after his recent struggles in Formula 1 qualifying sessions.

Vettel had been out-qualifieꦕd by Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc at each o🐠f the past nine grands prix - a run stretching back to Vettel’s last pole at June’s Canadian Grand Prix - with the Monegasque claiming four poles on the bounce since F1’s summer break.

The German stormed to his fifth career pole at Suzuka but was unable to convert it into a second win of the 2019 campaign as he bogged down off the line and ultimately had to 💛settle fo📖r a distant second behind Valtteri Bottas.

Asked if he felt he had made a breakthrough with🧔 the car at Suzuka, Vettel replied: “Noꦍt really, I think it was just a clean [qualifying] session.

“I don't think there was a particular problem. Obviously, we've been improving the car since Singapore, the update hౠas helped me in🧸 areas where maybe I struggled a bit before.

“But overall I think qualifying sessions on my side have🗹n’t gone entirely💎 smooth. So, maybe that one just went quite smooth. Both laps were clean, I had no issues preparing the lap and so on.

“[There is] nothing that has changed, we didn't change the car for here,🐬 so nothing that would explain the step in perfꦓormance.”

Mercedes had looked in a strong positi🦄on having dominated Friday practice, but Ferrari was able to turn the tables on the German manufacturer come Sunday’s rescheduled qualifying, scoring its second f💟ront-row lockout.

Explaining Ferrari’s turnaround, team principal Mattia Binotto said: “It’s always difficult to judge the true perforﷺmance on Friday, because we may be on different programmes.

“I don’t know how they were running. But focusing on ourselves, we got some car issues on Friday. We got quite high degradation, and we were through the setup for quඣaly and the race.

“We dropped the rear wing for qualy and the race, which helped as well the front balance. The car felt better. I think we got the right pace in tജhe qualy but not in the race still.

“We’ve got some degradation, higher at least to our competitors, how much it was compared to Friday, again difficult to judge. I thi꧑nk simply we try and address the issues we had on Friday and the𝓰 car improved.”

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