Sebastian Vettel: Ferrari 'should be better' than qualifying pace
Sebastian Vettel says Ferrari "should be better" than it showed in Australian Grand Prix qualifying, where its Formula 1 title rival Mercedes shocked by locking out the front row
Ferrari had headed to the F1 season opener as clear favourite after a very strong winter testing programme at Barcelona.
But Mercedes turned the tables with a surprise step up in form as Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas took the top two positions on the grid with Vettel down in third and seven tenths of a second adrift.
Hamilton had also been fastest in all three practice sessions.
Vettel admitted he had never expected that form from Mercedes, but has faith that Ferrari's SF90 is quicker than it has showed so far in Melbourne.
"I am certainly surprised. I think everybody is, probably even [Mercedes] themselves," said Vettel when asked about the gap by Autosport.
"Yesterday we didn't have a good day, and today felt better. But in terms of gap and pace it was very similar.
"For sure there is some homework for us to do to understand. I still think we have a great car.
"We should be better than this, so I am looking forward to tomorrow."
Vettel said Ferrari was not lacking in any specific area at Albert Park, but suggested Mercedes is better in the type of low and medium corners that characterise the track.
"I don't think the straight line is a problem as we are quite competitive down the straights, we are just losing in the corners," he said.
"There are 16 corners around here and I think it is fairly evenly spread.
"Probably by the looks of it so far it was more the lower and medium stuff [where Mercedes gained], rather than the high speed, which also speaks for a strong car in general.
"I haven't got the balance yet that maybe I would like to have in the lower speed, and not the confidence and trust which again around here can make a big difference."
Vettel made clear that the Ferrari has not felt as good in Australia as it did throughout pre-season testing.
"We have probably something like 10-15 degrees more ambient [temperature], a hotter track, and different circuit, so overall different conditions," he said.
"But the car felt really good in testing and probably around here this weekend so far it didn't feel as good yet.
"Yesterday was a difficult day for us, it was tricky. Today felt a bit better, but there is not an awful lot of time to try different things.
"You have to get on with it, sessions come fast - especially in qualifying you can't change much, if anything you get a better understanding of where you are losing out or where it feels uncomfortable.
"For us there is a bit of a margin but certainly the gap is there today and was a surprise, we didn't expect it coming here.
"But now it is that way and we focus on tomorrow and don't worry about the gap now."
Team principal Mattia Binotto suggested Melbourne might just be a weak track for Ferrari.
"We can't say this was the result we were expecting, but we are well aware that Albert Park is not an ideal track for us, as its characteristics do not suit our car that well," he said.
"Of course, we must improve, but we have gathered a great deal of information to identify the areas on which we must work."
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