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Sport News ANDROID 4
Sebastian Vettel has admitted he is not happy with his driving but is confident he can turn his form around before the end of the season.
The four-time world champion made the latest in a string of high-profile errors at the last race in Italy, when he spun and then collided with another car while rejoining.
Vettel said: “I take it as what it is and it is obviously not great but also not a disaster. It’s not the level I want to perform at but these things can happen to all of us now and again.”
The German has been making major driving errors at a rate of about one in every three races since the French Grand Prix in June 2018.
And this year the pressure has increased on the 32-year-old as a result of the arrival of Charles Leclerc as his team-mate at Ferrari.
The 21-year-old from Monaco has won the last two races, while Vettel’s last win was in Belgium in August 2020.

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Vettel denied that his issues, which are a major talking point within in F1, were psychological.
“I don’t think it’s mental,” he said. “It’s not that I am in the wrong place [in my mind]. I am doing the right things, which is why I think it’s crucial not to over-complicate things too much, and pull through it.
“Here and there I might not have the absolute trust in the car or the best feeling yet. But it’s improving my understanding of the car and then it’s a question of details, lining them up.
“Hopefully sooner rather than later it will click and things will start to fall into place. Until then we need to keep our head down. There are always things I can do better and learn. We see how the next few races go.”
Leclerc has out-qualified Vettel for the last seven races in a row, although some of them have involved extenuating circumstances. And on average qualifying pace, Leclerc is 0.132 seconds quicker than Vettel over the 14 races so far this season.
Vettel said: “First you need to be fair and say he is very quick. [There were] some sessions where I didn’t take part – Austria and Germany. Monza only half. I don’t think there is anything in particular standing out. If he out-qualifies me he has done a better job but then you have to look at the reasons why.”
Ferrari are expecting a more difficult weekend in Singapore, where the tight and twisty nature of the Marina Bay street circuit does not suit their car, and they expect to struggle to compete with Mercedes and Red Bull.
Leclerc said: “It might be a bit more difficult for us this weekend. Quite a lot of corners, a lot less straights. We are going to struggle a bit more but anything is possible everywhere and we see how it goes.”
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton enters the weekend aiming to take another step towards his sixth world title.
The Briton, whose last win was in Hungary at the beginning of August, is 65 points ahead of team-mate Valtteri Bottas in the championship.
Sport News ANDROID 3
At the press launch of a TV series about himself last week, Sergio Ramos joked with journalists: “I have more seasons now with Amazon than I do with Real Madrid.”
The Spain centre-back has two years left on his contract at the Bernabeu but his club are not looking to renew it.
And while Ramos has been a constant presence at Real for 14 years, the uncertainty surrounding his future only adds to the increasing sense of instability around a club which has won four of the past six Champions Leagues.
Since Zinedine Zidane returned as manager towards the end of last season, his win percentage is below 50% and there has been little to suggest improvement since the start of this season.
Real still look unsettled and they are still inconsistent, worrying signs as they enter a two week-period which started with Champions League defeat to Paris St-Germain, followed by matches against leaders Atletico Madrid and Champions League qualifiers Sevilla in La Liga.
Moments such as these are nothing new at Real Madrid, a perennial soap opera providing tales of conspiracy, intrigue and passion and never failing to serve up one cliff-hanger after another, both on and off the pitch.
But as Europe’s perennial winners started their latest European campaign with defeat, is Zidane struggling to make the impact this time around, and is there a danger the Frenchman might not even be there come the next Champions League final?
Never go back? Zidane struggling to inspire on his return
Zidane wrote himself out of the Real Madrid storyline when he quit after somehow winning the Champions League at the end of the 2017-18 season – his third title in a row. He felt there were big changes to make at the club and that he was not going to receive the backing he needed to implement them.
He might have chosen this time of self-imposed footballing exile as an opportunity to reflect on a fine career as both a player and a coach. He probably didn’t come across the words of poet Felix Dennis:
Never go back. Never go back.
Never surrender the future you’ve earned.
Keep to the track, to the beaten track.
Never return to the bridges you burned.
Nor did he take similar advice from people close to him. In March, he returned at the request of president Florentino Perez, who had previously tried to entice Mauricio Pochettino from Tottenham and the unemployed former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte.
Zidane took the job before the end of last season because they told him that, if he didn’t, Jose Mourinho would be the chosen one (more on that later). He was also promised he would be a major player in deciding who came in and who left. And that there would be plenty of changes.
There needed to be. Zidane’s last Champions League success flattered to deceive in a season when his side finished 17 points behind La Liga winners Barcelona.
But things have not improved. Since coming back, he has won seven of 15 league games, a win rate of 46.7%. Santiago Solari, the man he replaced, won 22 out of 32 games in charge, a win rate of 68.8%. That was significantly higher than Zidane’s but not high enough to earn the president’s confidence and the Argentine was dismissed after just four and a half months.
Key injuries to vital players such as Marco Asensio and Eden Hazard, a summer signing who found himself sidelined before kicking a ball for the club, have played their part in the lacklustre start.
But so have Zidane’s changeable tactics.
Only left-back Ferland Mendy, who joined from Lyon, looks to have hit the ground running. Luka Jovic – who arrived from Eintracht Frankfurt, where he was scoring for fun – has not looked like he has the quality to be an automatic starter. At least not in the opinion of Zidane, who has started him only once and then replaced him with midfielder Luka Modric after 68 minutes.
Real also signed some youngsters for big money – Eder Militao, 21, (£42.7m from Porto) and 18-year-old forward Rodrygo (£40.2m from Santos). The latter has been injured since pre-season, while the former has yet to feature.
Why Zidane appears to be losing his trump card
Zidane has never been considered a footballing Einstein as a coach, but his trump card at Real Madrid has always been the relationship he has enjoyed with his players. It is perceived by many as a rosy, peaceful, harmonious co-existence.
But there are signs those relationships are crumbling.
In deciding who should stay and who should go, the 47-year-old has not endeared himself to many of the Madrid faithful. They will see the sale to Atletico of Marcos Llorente, the nephew of the great Gento and a Blanco to the bone, as a sort of betrayal.
They will also be unimpressed with the loaning out to Sevilla of Reguilon, another product of the La Fabrica academy who could have slotted into the position held by Marcelo, who was 11kg over his optimum weight last season and has been struggling on that front ever since. And then there was the loan departure of Dani Ceballos, who could certainly be doing a job for the club in midfield, to Arsenal.
Zidane’s obsession with bringing in compatriot Paul Pogba has not been pretty to witness, not least because Manchester United never had any intention of selling him and Perez never seemed that keen on actually buying the 26-year-old.
The club had agreed terms with Tottenham’s Christian Eriksen and Ajax’s Donny van de Beek, but Zidane stopped the moves because Pogba was the midfielder he wanted.
The reality is that Zidane and the club were hoping to sell Isco, Gareth Bale and James Rodriguez, but no offers were forthcoming. For many, his use of those players is little more than a stick he is using to beat the president with by saying, basically: “You didn’t get me the player I wanted so now I’m going to have to use the players you wanted.”
Bizarrely, Bale’s lack of rapport with the manager has provoked precisely the kind of reaction that Zidane would have hoped for, with the Wales forward putting in some “I’ll show you” performances that have brought him two goals and one assist in three games. The downside is that it has also earned him a red card – thanks to two yellows collected in less than two minutes – and a one-match ban.
And finally, the club’s decision to sell goalkeeper Keylor Navas to Paris St-Germain was never something Zidane wanted either.
The general opinion at the Bernabeu is that the relationship between Zidane and Perez is not the best. A division between them is being created by their differences on Pogba and Navas, by the club’s failure to get rid of players the Frenchman did not want, and by the confusion over tactics – with the team lining up for one game with three at the back, the next in a 4-3-3 set-up and another as a 4-4-2.
Perez is frustrated at the lack of game time for some big-money signings and, for the first time in a while, the president feels he is not in complete control and the manager is not doing as he would like.
Zidane cannot be happy either, now finding himself with a squad of veterans combined with players untried at this level.
As a consequence, the Madrid media close to Perez are beginning to make mischief with criticisms of the coach.
When that happens, Zidane should know drastic things can happen.
Mourinho waiting in the wings
Around the end of 2015, just as Rafael Benitez was struggling to win hearts and minds at the Bernabeu and before Mourinho joined Manchester United, Perez spoke to him with a view to discussing a return to the club.
Iker Casillas, one of the previous thorns in the side of the prickly Portuguese coach, was already gone. The goalkeeper was a sacrificial lamb, unceremoniously given away to Porto after a career that had, until then, been dedicated to two sides – his club and his country.
Only two problems remained: Cristiano Ronaldo and Ramos, the two players Mourinho blamed for his departure from Madrid.
Get rid of them, he told Perez, and we can talk.
Ronaldo is now at Juventus. One down, one to go.
I would not wager much on Ramos receiving a contract extension any time soon.
