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Ferrari say Vettel is ahead of Hamilton for 2021 seat

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Ferrari's SF1000 revealed (2:10)

Ferrari reveals its 2020 challenger, the SF1000, in Reggio Emilia, Italy. (2:10)

Sebastian Vettel is Ferrari's first choice to partner Charles Leclerc next year, team boss Mattia Binotto said Tuesday, despite speculation that they want six-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.

The 32-year-old German had a difficult and disappointing 2019 season, outperformed by Leclerc in the young Monegasque's first year at Ferrari, and is out of contract at the end of 2020.

Hamilton is in a similar position with Formula One champions Mercedes, though the Briton is expected to stay and met Ferrari chairman John Elkann last year.

Binotto told reporters at the launch of the Italian team's new SF1000 car that Vettel remains very much part of future planning, even if he no longer has clear No. 1 status.

"Seb is our first choice at the moment," he said.

"Obviously, it is something we are discussing with him and we will continue discussing, but he is certainly our first option, our preference."

Asked whether he could rule out Hamilton, who can expect to become the highest paid Formula One driver of all time if he stays at Mercedes, Binotto refused to be drawn.

"We are focused on our drivers," he said. "And we are considering Seb as our option at the moment."

Pressed on whether Hamilton might still be a "fallback option," Binotto said that was not under consideration.

Vettel, asked if he wants to stay at Ferrari for what would be a seventh successive season, said age is certainly not a factor.

"I feel young enough. You spoke about Lewis. He's even older," he said of the 35-year-old who can equal Ferrari great Michael Schumacher's record seven championships this year and beat the German's unprecedented 91 wins.

"So that's not a limitation. So yeah, happy to keep going."

Vettel started last season as the clear No. 1 at Ferrari -- the sport's most successful team but one without a title in 12 years -- only for Leclerc to take more wins, poles, podiums and points.

In December, Ferrari extended 22-year-old Leclerc's contract to the end of 2024, a huge vote of confidence from a team that has rarely committed itself for that long to even the greatest of drivers.

The pair clashed on track, famously with a collision in Brazil when they were warned about their behaviour, but Binotto said they would be free to race on equal terms from the start of this season.

"Last year we said Seb would have been first driver and Charles second," he said.

"I think that after a year, both have shown they can fight for the best result, so they will be on the same level. Let's say they can both fight for being ahead, and that's it. So let them race."