Raikkonen signs new Ferrari deal for 2018

Reuters
Kimi Raikkonen has signed a one-year contract extension with Ferrari for the 2018 season, the Formula One team disclosed on Tuesday.
Reuters
Raikkonen signs new Ferrari deal for 2018
Reuters

Formula One driver Kimi Raikkonen of Ferrari arrives for a media meeting of his sponsor Santander Bank in Helsinki, Finland, on August 22, 2017. The Finn has signed a one-year contract extension with Ferrari for 2018.

Kimi Raikkonen will be racing for Ferrari again next season after the Italian Formula One team announced on Tuesday a contract extension with the Finn for 2018.

The popular 2007 world champion, who will be 38 in October, would have been out of contract at the end of this year with plenty of rivals eyeing up his seat at the sport's most successful and glamorous team.

Raikkonen has not won a race since he was at Lotus in 2013, and is currently fifth in a championship led by German teammate Sebastian Vettel, who has won four of the season's 11 races to date.

Vettel is also out of contract at the end of the season and the short Ferrari statement did not mention him. However, he is expected to remain once a longer and more lucrative deal has been hammered out.

The timing of Ferrari's statement was earlier than expected, since the team has often made such announcements at its home Italian round at Monza which follows on from this weekend's Belgian Grand Prix.

It had also been tipped to confirm both drivers at the same time.

Vettel, a four-time world champion with Red Bull, has also been linked in some media speculation to champion Mercedes where Finland's Valtteri Bottas has yet to be confirmed for 2018.

By opting to keep Raikkonen, Ferrari has gone for an experienced driver who is still quick and who will not rock the boat in what is likely to be his final season. He first raced for Ferrari between 2007-9 and then returned in 2014.

He and Vettel get on well, with the German keen on him staying, and Raikkonen has shown his loyalty this season by accepting team orders to his detriment.

The Finn has twice finished second behind Vettel, in Monaco and Hungary, while also taking third place in Britain and Russia.

He started on pole position in Monaco in May, his first appearance at the front of the grid since June 2008, and has a strong track record at Belgium's Spa-Francorchamps where he was won four times.

His future was called into question in July, however, when Ferrari chairman Sergio Marchionne called him "a bit of a laggard".

"I think Kimi has got to show a higher level of commitment to the process," he had told reporters at the Austrian Grand Prix.

Marchionne has also emphasized that he wants Vettel to stay.

Ferrari has supplied nine of the Finn's 20 career GP wins, with another nine coming at McLaren and two behind the wheel of a Lotus, AFP reported.

His 122 starts for Ferrari place him third in the team's all-time drivers list behind Michael Schumacher (179) and Felipe Massa (139).

Raikkonen's decision to stay put in Italy alongside Vettel has postponed until at least next season a game of musical chairs amongst the top drivers.

Lewis Hamilton is tied to Mercedes until the end of next season but the German manufacturer is expected to offer his teammate Bottas a new deal for 2018.

And Red Bull will be relieved to hold on to its flying Dutch teenager Max Verstappen and Australian Daniel Ricciardo for another campaign.


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