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Sebastian Vettel has said that he does not see the need to impose team orders at Ferrari. In other words, team-mate and pole-sitter, Kimi Raikkonen is free to race for the win in Monza.

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The Finn is currently a distant third in the championship. He is 68 points behind Vettel and a further 85 adrift of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton.

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For a long time, there have been suggestions about team orders in Vettel’s favour. However, the four-time world champion assumes Raikkonen will challenge for victory on Sunday.

“If he is starting from pole I guess he is allowed to win,” said Vettel. “It is a long race, he wants to win, I want to win. So hopefully one of us will win.”

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He did admit that he would be “a little bit” more careful into the first chicane as it is his team-mate alongside him, but Raikkonen said he would drive no differently.

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“We know as a team we can race but we need to be careful with each other,” said Raikkonen. “I don’t see how it changes for anybody.

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“I don’t think anybody was purposefully [going to] take a stupid amount of risk to damage someone else’s car.”

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Raikkonen ended a long run of near-misses in qualifying this year to secure his first pole of the season at Ferrari’s home race. Despite that, he said the result is not a relief.

“If this would be the first one then of course it is different,” he said. “We keep trying, sometimes it works out and sometimes not, it’s not as easy as it looks on TV.

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“The whole weekend has been working pretty well, conditions have been changing. After practice, one of the three cars was going to get it.

“Today it was me but it doesn’t really change anything, tomorrow is the main job to be done.”

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Raikkonen’s future at Ferrari is unclear but he appears to be heading for another contract renewal for 2019.

The 38-year-old said Monza was “probably the best place” to take the pole he has waited this season for.

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“The second chicane on the last run was pretty decent and enough for pole position,” he said.

“It is a lot of games going first and getting out first and this and that, but in the end there was a train of cars and that is enough [for a tow].

“The car has been working well. We didn’t change the car since the first runs, so all running smoothly so far. Hopefully tomorrow is a similar situation.”

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Dhruv George

14,853 Articles

Dhruv George is EssentiallySports’ foremost authority on motorsport and a founding member of the outlet’s NASCAR desk. A Journalism graduate fluent in English and French, he brings over eight years of motorsports journalism experience covering everything from high-octane NASCAR battles to the finesse of Formula 1 and MotoGP. His extensive paddock access has earned him exclusive interviews with top names such as Know more

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