Hill: Title fight still 'wide open' despite Ferrari setbacks

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Damon Hill says Ferrari's chances of challenging Red Bull for the world title are still intact despite the Scuderia and Charles Leclerc's recent setbacks.

The Monegasque has been unrivalled in qualifying in the last four rounds, but retirements in Barcelona and last weekend in Baku have relegated Leclerc to third in the championship standings, 34 points behind archrival and leader Max Verstappen who conquered in Baku his fifth win of the 2022 season.

Meanwhile, the Scuderia's reliability woes and double DNF in Azerbaijan have put the Italian outfit 80 points behind Red Bull in the Constructors' standings.

But Hill insists the title fight between F1's two front-running outfits is no where near being done and dusted in favour of the bulls.

"It must be immensely frustrating, but the championship is still wide open," the 1996 F1 world champion told Sky Sports F1.

"It was a terrible day for them but I don’t think it’s a disaster. It’s too early to start talking about that. And Red Bull have had problems as well."

Charles Leclerc (MON) Ferrari F1-75 and Max Verstappen (NLD) Red Bull Racing. 23.04.2022. Formula 1 World Championship, Rd 4, Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Imola, Italy, Sprint

With engine performance gains limited by F1's freeze on power unit development, Hill's Sky F1 sidekick Johnny Herbert underscored the importance of the House of Maranello getting on top of its reliability concerns.

"It’s how you delve into all those mashed-up bits and try to find what the issue is because it will be a big headache for them in the latter part of the season as that’s when you need the power to be strong," contended Herbert who pointed out the statistically strong reliability of F1's engines.

"For the championship, it’s a total disaster. It’s something you don’t probably expect to see in Formula 1, the modern sort of era we’ve got.

“And I think that’s where we saw the mechanical issue they had in Barcelona, now we’ve had another that looks like an engine failure.

"So it will be a really tough time for them to be able to get everything back on track because they have to do it quick, and we thought it had to be done [in Azerbaijan]."

Like Hill, Herbert suggested that Ferrari can remain in the mix if it gets on top of its issues, as Leclerc's form this year is scintillating.

"We know it’s brilliant what he did in qualifying [in Azerbaijan] and he was racing well, so he knows he’s driving brilliantly at the present time.

"So once they get everything sorted and fixed, so they don’t have these failures, as a driver you’ll be able to deliver the job quickly."

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