SHANGHAI - Sebastian Vettel labelled Red Bull's
Daniil Kvyat "a madman" after a first-corner clash between them and
Vettel's Ferrari team-mate Kimi Raikkonen at the Chinese Grand Prix on
Sunday.
Sebastian Vettel (L) was second in the Chinese Grand Prix
followed in third place by Red Bull's Daniil Kvyat, who the Ferrari
driver called "a madman" after a first-corner clash during the race in
Shanghai on April 17, 2016
Kyvat's aggressive charge into turn one where the Ferraris
were already wheel-to-wheel forced Vettel to take evasive action, the
German hitting Raikkonen, who had to pit to repair damage to his car.
Vettel was left languishing near the back after the clash
but fought back to overtake Kyvat in the final stint and finish second
behind Nico Rosberg's Mercedes.
"You came like a torpedo," the German raged at Kyvat, confronting his
rival as they walked to the podium. "If I'd kept going on the same
line, we'd have crashed."You were lucky this time," Vettel added, jabbing his finger in the direction of Kyvat, who simply shrugged: "That's racing."
Vettel reacted angrily after his brush with disaster, accusing Kyvat for driving "like a madman" in a furious rant over the team radio.
"Kvyat's attack was suicidal," he fumed before apologising
for bumping into Raikkonen. "Massive apologies to the team. I feel very,
very sorry about Kimi but there was no way out!"
Vettel and Kyvat continued to exchange heated words on the podium as
Rosberg made his victory speech, the latter showing little remorse when
asked about the incident.
"You see a gap, you go for it," said the Russian. "Yeah, it
was a risky move, I agree with Seb. But this kind of move can bring you
podiums.
"He's on the podium, I'm on the podium, it's fine," he added. "I will keep on risking like this, and I hope he respects that."
Vettel had calmed down a little at the official post-race interview.
"I was very lucky to continue because it was a big hit with
Kimi," said the four-time world champion. "It's a shame because you
don't want the same colour cars touching."
Raikkonen cut a forlorn figure after a battling fifth-place finish."Obviously I got hit and it was a disaster after that," said the Finn. "I just had to make the best of it and at least we got some points."
Team boss Maurizio Arrivabene bemoaned Ferrari's latest
setback after reliability problems in the season's first two races in
Australia and Bahrain, but refused to blame Kyvat.
"It was an accident," he said. "Pointing the finger at somebody is not correct. This is racing, not Monopoly.
"I think in normal circumstances we would have had a very,
very good chance to win the race but when things like this happen, you
have to accept it."
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