DanielPT wrote:Wallio wrote:Seriously, as a HUGE Vettel fan, I have to tell ya Seb, STFU! Seriously, what is the point of this? Are you trying to mentally-bury Webber Senna-style? Pretty sure you did that already. This just makes you look like the spoiled brat people claim you are. Shut up and race! Horner needs to slap that boy!
I am now starting to side with stramala on this. If it was to do what he is doing right now, Vettel should have told Webber to shut up and deal with it right from the beginning instead of going with half-hearted apologies, then sort of backtrack and finally not moving on by still rumbling about it. That is probably the worst way to go with!
Well, he is just a kid after all...
The combination of youth and considerable success in a very short period of time is potentially very dangerous, and would be enough to go to the head of most, I'd wager.
Bear in mind that, had Alonso won the title in 2012, he'd have been the youngest triple world champion in the history of the sport, and he is six years older than Vettel - which puts in perspective how quickly Vettel's success has come. In 2011, thanks to Newey's work, he put in one of the most crushingly dominant performances over a season in the entire history of the sport, his success rate puts him amongst, and indeed ahead, some of the greats drivers of the sport, whilst he now looks to be in a position where he might be able to make it four back to back WDC's by the age of 26 (to put that in perspective, Schumacher, the last driver to show this level of dominance, had only just won his first title by that age).
On top of that, you have Bernie Ecclestone as a personal friend of his and talking him up as a driver who could obliterate the records the Schumacher established - records that few thought could ever be beaten - plus the most successful designer in the history of the sport on your side and several figures within the team that have a strong emotional bias towards you.
Now, whilst that does not excuse him from criticism - indeed, I've had my share of harsh words for him over the years - at the same time, if I was in Vettel's position and presented with that level of success and adoration, can I deny that I wouldn't develop something of a sense of entitlement? I am not entirely sure that I wouldn't have developed some of those vices myself.
I have to agree, though, that Vettel's comments here, perhaps misguided by youth, are probably about the worst things he could say in this situation. If he continued to show contrition for what he did in Malaysia, then that might garner sympathy with those that felt he abused the trust of the team and assuage their criticism; alternatively, had he been harsher and more ruthless from the start, then he'd probably have the support of the old "traditionalists" who dislike team orders and have the "all or nothing at all" approach to racing. In trying to appeal to all sides in this situation by changing his message, though, he's ended up annoying both sides by effectively contradicting himself.