“He endeared himself across all areas of the business, whether it was turning up with chocolates for secretaries or learning the lingo in the garage. His command of cockney slang became legendary. His ability to just relate to people and get the best out of them was great. And he was formidable in the cars that we produced in that period of time.”
A man who came to know all about that was Webber, himself yet to win a GP at the beginning of ‘09. Over the winter, Mark badly broke a leg when a bicycle he was riding in his own Tasmanian Challenge charity event was hit by a car just as he was about to get his hands on a new-rules Adrian Newey machine and go head-to-head with Vettel.
It could have torpedoed the career of a lesser man and it is to Webber’s great credit that he rose to the challenge, taking his first win at Nürburgring in ’09 and being a big enough thorn in Vettel’s side for the rivalry to become spiky, in 2010 particularly.
It says much about both men that they were able to co-exist in that Red Bull environment for five years. The reason is that while both are hugely competitive individuals, they are both fundamentally decent fellows. While Webber often felt that Red Bull was “Seb’s team” – the “not bad for a No2 driver” Silverstone win and the Malaysia ‘Multi 21’ incidents spring immediately to mind – and admitted that sometimes Vettel got under his skin, he couldn’t find it within himself to properly dislike him. “He’s basically a decent guy and I like his family…” Mark said.
Horner again: “They were halcyon days: massive competitors, big teams that we were up against, and some outstanding successes. Sebastian, at that stage, was very focused on achieving. Not just success, but going for and achieving records. They meant a lot to him.
“The fans did as well. I remember just seeing him collect every bit of memorabilia and gift he was given in Japan… Some of them were slightly weird but he kept absolutely everything, insisted on taking everything home. He was a pleasure to have in our team and we achieved some great things together.
“He just got better and better. In 2009 we, like him, were a young team, and we made a few mistakes. In 2010, he was the stand-out driver that year, had a lot of unreliability and, against the odds, won the championship at the last round. In 2011 he built on that, then ’12 was a super-tough year. He’d only won one race before we left Europe. And then won, I think, four on the bounce to go head-to-head with Fernando in that final race in Brazil.
“But by the time we got to ’13, he just absolutely dominated and achieved those nine victories in succession. That, for me, was his pinnacle year: he brought everything together and was just truly outstanding.”
When Horner refers to Vettel being formidable in the cars that they produced at that time, he is talking in particular about the double and blown diffuser Red Bulls which Sebastian was able to make work in slow corners in a way that Webber sometimes couldn’t. In the quick stuff, like Barcelona Turn 9 and Copse at Silverstone, Mark was often quicker.