Sebastian Vettel has defended title rival Lewis Hamilton after his “silly” comments about Ferrari following the British GP.
After being hit by Vettel’s team-mate Kimi Raikkonen and finishing second at Silverstone, Hamilton said the first-lap move was “interesting tactics” from Ferrari. The Englishman has since retracted his remarks, adding on social media: “Sometimes we say dumb s**t and we learn from it.”
And Vettel, who won an eventful race to extend his championship advantage over Hamilton, has backed the Mercedes driver’s “human” reaction.
“I think it’s fine,” Vettel said ahead of his home German GP. “Obviously it was silly to say it but we are racing, we’ve all been there and it’s never great if you are hit without doing anything wrong.
“It’s also fine to express your opinion even if it’s not right or reasonable. It’s human, so I think it’s fine.”
Ferrari also accepted Hamilton’s apology after the British GP, responding on Twitter: “We appreciate Lewis Hamilton’s comments today following Kimi Raikkonen’s apologies after the British GP, notably when Lewis described the episode at the start as a ‘racing incident’.”
Hamilton, however, did take exception to some of Vettel’s comments from Silverstone, specifically the radio message where he celebrated winning at his rivals’ home.
“I heard there was something said,” said Hamilton. “But l see that as a weakness. The whole need to say something is something we can play with.”
Vettel excited to battle Hamilton
The big news coming into the Hockenheimring weekend is that Hamilton has finally signed his new Mercedes deal, keeping him with the Silver Arrows until the end of the 2020 season.
“Congrats!” said Vettel. “I don’t know why it took so long but I think it was pretty clear.”
The Englishman’s contract extension puts him in sync with Vettel, offering the prospect of the two multi-time world champions enjoying plenty more title battles up until the new regulations in 2021.
“You want to fight the best and Lewis has been one of the best since he entered Formula 1,” added Vettel, who signed his new Ferrari deal last year.
“It’s good to be there.”