MEXICO CITY: Sebastian Vettel put Ferrari into the Mexican Grand Prix mix with yesterday’s fastest practice lap while Lewis Hamilton also put down a marker in his title battle with Mercedes team mate Nico Rosberg.
Triple champion Hamilton, 26 points behind Rosberg with three races remaining, had set the pace on a chilly and overcast morning at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez with a lap of one minute 20.914 seconds.
Vettel ousted the Briton from the top in the afternoon, by just 0.004 of a second, with a lap of 1:19.790 on supersoft tyres that showed Ferrari are not about to let tomorrow’s race turn into another Mercedes duel.
It was the first time the Italian team had led a Formula One practice session since Belgium in August and Vettel was pumped up, calling McLaren’s Fernando Alonso ‘an idiot’ after being slowed by the Spaniard.
A more competitive Ferrari could be good news for Hamilton if he can take the victory and have others finishing between him and Rosberg.
Rosberg was seventh on the morning timesheets and 0.759 off Hamilton’s pace but moved up to third in the afternoon – albeit still 0.431 slower than his team mate.
Mercedes said the championship leader had been running through his morning programme as planned and had not suffered any problem.
Hamilton, who picked up where he left off after a dominant win in Texas last weekend, needs to win tomorrow to boost his flagging hopes of a fourth title while Rosberg would be crowned champion if he wins and his team mate finishes 10th or lower.
Mercedes have already clinched the constructors’ championship for the third year in a row while Rosberg and Hamilton are the only drivers in contention for the other title.
Vettel’s team mate Kimi Raikkonen, who was third in the morning, was fourth after lunch.
Mexican Sergio Perez kept the home crowd cheering with fourth place ahead of Force India team mate Nico Hulkenberg in the opening session but dropped back to 15th in the afternoon.
The morning session was red-flagged when Sauber’s Brazilian Felipe Nasr ran bumpily over a kerb, with the right section of his car’s front wing shattering and sending a cloud of carbon fibre debris across the track.