BUDAPEST, Hungary: Sebastian Vettel considered retiring from Formula One for quite some time before finally announcing Thursday this season will be his last.
The German, who joined Instagram on Wednesday, used the platform one day later to announce he plans to spend more time with his family and work on causes close to his heart.
Vettel won his four F1 titles from 2010 to 2013 with Red Bull, but his last victory was with Ferrari in 2019. His best finish this season with Aston Martin is sixth.
âI feel that obviously this decision has been in my head for so long now, and has taken so much energy to be honest, and maybe even at times distracted me,â he said Thursday. âThere was a lot of thought leading into this. I think itâs the right time for me to do other things.
âSo much dedication means also a lot of time spent in your head, in your thoughts, but also physically away from home, from kids, family,â added the 35-year-old. âIâve grown other things, other than the children who are growing, itâs other interests and views. I canât ignore these voices.â
He has been increasingly outspoken on environmental issues.
âItâs one of the one of the factors that definitely played a role,â he added. âI understand that part of my passion, my job is coming with things that Iâm not a fan of, obviously, traveling the world, racing cars, burning resources. Once you see these things, and once youâre aware, then I donât think you can really unsee.â
Vettel has won 53 races, the third-highest total in F1 behind Lewis Hamilton (103) and Michael Schumacher (91). He won an F1 record 13 races in 2013.
Vettel became the youngest world champion at 23 in 2010 and later became the third driver to win four consecutive championships after F1 greats Juan Miguel Fangio and Schumacher, his idol. Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton has since won four straight.
Vettelâs title bids with Ferrari were unsuccessful after promising starts were undone by driver errors. He led the standings at the midway point in 2017 and was in contention the following year, only to lose both championships to Hamilton. He crashed from pole at the Singapore Grand Prix in 2017 and swerved off track into the barriers when comfortably leading the rain-soaked German Grand Prix the following year.
He was stunned when Ferrari did not renew his contract after he struggled to compete alongside newcomer Charles Leclerc in 2019, and again in 2020.
âItâs sad. Obviously itâs going to be strange not to see Seb in the paddock,â Leclerc said. âI arrived the first year and I was probably very weird to him because I was just shy and didnât know what to say. Now heâs a friend and he always texts me.â
Along with Hamilton, Vettel has also been increasingly vocal about human rights conditions in countries where F1 races.
âI am tolerant and feel we all have the same rights to love, no matter what we look like, where we come from and who we love,â he said.
His stance on protecting the environment has also escalated. At the Austrian GP in Spielberg three weeks ago, he wore a T-shirt with âSave the Beesâ written on it. At the Canadian GP in June he had the message, âStop mining tar sands. Canadaâs climate crime,â written on his race helmet.
âI feel we live in very decisive times and how we all shape these next years will determine our lives. My passion comes with certain aspects that I have learned to dislike,â Vettel said. âThey might be solved in the future but the will to apply that change has to grow much, much stronger and has to be leading to action.â
Vettelâs team is sponsored by Saudi state oil firm Aramco.
Red Bull driver Sergio Perez understood Vettelâs decision.
âItâs extremely personal. Itâs how you feel and what you want to do,â the 32-year-old Mexican driver said. âYou put other priorities in place and you are not willing to pay the price of being an F1 driver.â
Vettelâs former Red Bull teammate Daniel Ricciardo said F1 will miss Vettel.
âYouâre losing a bit of a legend of the sport,â Ricciardo said.
Ferrari driver Carlos Sainz Jr. and George Russell of Mercedes praised Vettelâs endearing human side.
âEveryone in the paddock loves him and you will hear anything saying a bad word about Seb,â Sainz said. âI hope we will see him back helping the sport in some of the ways heâs been very vocal about.â
Russell called Vettel âsuch an inspirationâ and will miss the meetings when Vettel spoke up for drivers.
âYou do learn how much general knowledge he has, how much F1 knowledge,â Russell said. âIt is quite inspiring to see. Above all heâs just a great bloke, a great human being.â
World champion Max Verstappen praised another of Vettelâs achievements: growing his new-look, floppy, surferâs hairstyle.
âIt grew back magically,â Verstappen said. âI wish I had that.â
4-time F1 champion Vettel felt like retiring for a long time
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Updated 28 July 2022
4-time F1 champion Vettel felt like retiring for a long time

- The German, who joined Instagram on Wednesday, used the platform one day later to announce he plans to spend more time with his family
- Vettel won his four F1 titles from 2010 to 2013 with Red Bull, but his last victory was with Ferrari in 2019