So the first question to consider is whether plagiarism is happening. If you have reasonable suspicion that another user is plagiarizing your answer by actually taking your content and using it inappropriately in their own answer, then that is very bad, and you should be flagging for moderator attention. Having said that, this case seems very clearly not plagiarism. The answer contains no original content from your answer, so clearly that's not relevant in this case.
Next, you bring up the issue of similar answers to the question being posted as an issue. The typical convention in this regard is to ignore cases where the answers were posted at close to the same time, to the point where it's reasonable that both started writing the answer without seeing the other. What you'll often find being discouraged is providing answers that add no additional value over other answers that had been posted days, or even years earlier. Of course, these are just common conventions, and by no means rules, so as a consequence you shouldn't be flagging posts because you think that other answers already conveyed that information, but many users do choose to downvote such answers as a result of feeling that they aren't useful.
You also mention that you think the answer is inferior (while also saying that it was the same, which is a contradiction). If you feel that an answer is not useful as a result of not being sufficiently clear, then by all means, reflect this in your vote. Votes are there to indicate whether or not a post is useful, not just whether it is technically correct. A correct answer that is confusing, or fails to properly convey the important information to readers is not a useful answer, and we want votes to reflect that. This of course has no bearing on when a post was posted. An unclear answer posted first is no different than an unclear answer posted after another answer.