Vettel among the greats

Oct 28, 2013, updated May 12, 2025

Thousands of fans celebrated Sebastian Vettel’s fourth Formula One world title in his home town of Heppenheim on Sunday as sports, politics and the media also saluted the young German.

Some 3500 fans from across the country gathered at a public event in Heppenheim, 40km outside Frankfurt, to watch Vettel clinch his fourth straight crown with victory at the Indian Grand Prix.

“The atmosphere was fantastic – we were all excited. Vettel raced with superior ease as always,” Vettel fan club head Alex Moeller said as champagne corks popped.

Vettel emulated Michael Schumacher (seven titles overall) and Juan Manuel Fangio (five) with four titles in a row, and Alain Prost also had four.

“Compliments and congratulation to Sebastian – a great performance by him and the team. He truly deserves the fourth title,” Schumacher said via Sky TV.

Prost said from Red Bull’s engine suppliers Renault: “I’m delighted to see Sebastian win the title today. He is a great driver and he has had some outstanding wins this year, some of the best of his career so far.

“He is a great champion and I don’t think this title will be his last.”

At age 26, Sebastian Vettel has already established an era of dominance, putting him on course to become the most successful driver in Formula One history.

With four championships in successive years, the unassuming but steely German will be eyeing the seven world titles totted up by his great compatriot Michael Schumacher.

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Breaking records has become a habit for the carpenter’s son from Heppenheim, who graduated from go-karting and junior circuits to become Formula One’s youngest participant, aged 19 years and 53 days, with a practice drive in Turkey in 2006.

The next season, on his race debut in the United States, Vettel became the youngest driver to score a point in Formula One. That year in Japan, he also became the youngest to lead a race.

And in 2008, at a rain-hit Monza, the big one: Vettel became the youngest pole-sitter and then youngest race winner, aged just 21.

That stunning result for Toro Rosso triggered a move to Red Bull for 2009 when he almost landed the drivers’ title in his first season, but had to settle for runner-up behind Jenson Button.

What followed has been extraordinary. In 2010, Vettel nervelessly won the final race at Abu Dhabi to snatch the world title from third in the standings, becoming the sport’s youngest champion.

The 2011 season was a parade as the increasingly confident star racked up 11 wins and a record 15 pole positions to seal the title with four races remaining.

A late surge, helped by four wins in Asia, carried him to the 2012 title, again clinched under huge pressure on the last day of the season in Brazil.

And a comparatively slow start to this season has accelerated into another landslide win triggered by six straight wins after the mid-year break.

However, Vettel has not had it all his own way. In unaccustomed scenes for F1, he was booed on the podium in Belgium, Italy and Singapore by a section of disgruntled fans.

The disaffection might be traced back to Vettel unsportingly ignoring team orders and overtaking stablemate Mark Webber to win the Malaysian Grand Prix in March.

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