Pascal Wehrlein : My Best drives in 2017 has been Overlooked
Pascal Wehrlein counts his best race performances of the 2017 Formula 1 season were overlooked.
Wehrlein scored all
five of Sauber's 2017 points via eighth place in the Spanish Grand Prix and
10th in Azerbaijan, but has lost his seat to Formula 2 champion Charles
Leclerc.
Though the Barcelona
drive was the statistical high point, Wehrlein reckons he performed better than
that in the second half of the season - when Sauber's declining form mean the
best he could do was 12th in Singapore, and he ended the year with three
straight 14th places.
"In terms of
result, [Barcelona] was the best race of the year but probably in the second
half of the season I had better races, but you couldn't see it," said
Wehrlein.
"Even if we had
a good race in the second half of the season you couldn't see it because the
gap was just too big - for example, in Suzuka, I was lapped by the second-last
guys.
"I'm quite
happy in the end with five points. Not all of the races have been good as I
wished but I think in general we did what we could do."
As well as Sauber
falling away from its rivals, Wehrlein said his own form was hampered by extra
issues for much of the latter part of the year.
He said engine
problems afflicted him "from Austria to Monza" and "in Japan and
Austin the car was all over the place".
The 23-year-old
added that he was sure he could still return to F1 after 2018 if he had to race
elsewhere for a season, joking "I won't retire!" when asked if he
feared missing next year would end his F1 career.
Wehrlein said he
could look back on 2017 with no regrets and underlined that he was still
developing as an F1 driver.
"Definitely I
was always giving my best, and I think that's the most important thing that you
can say about yourself," he added.
"When an opportunity
was there, we took it.
"With more
experience you think 'ah, one or two races ago I was doing this direction with
the set-up, now I know this was worse I should have gone in this direction',
and you always learn something."
Pascal Wehrlein defended himself saying he tried his
best and was in good form until Sauber left him behind. He claims his best
drives is overlooked and lost his F1 seat for 2018.





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