Malaysia: pre-race 2016

In third practice Hamilton looked to have the whip hand, with Red Bull closer to Ferrari than I expected.

The first session of qualifying was very much as you might expect. Alonso, now with a 45 place grid penalty, did the bare minimum, and the Manors, Saubers and Palmer also left at this stage.

There weren’t many surprises in Q2 either. The biggest was that Button escaped to Q3 and Bottas (starting 11th) did not. Behind the Finn are the Haas drivers, Magnussen and the Toro Rossos.

In Q3 things looked a bit odd after the first runs. Rosberg was only fastest for the third row, a mile behind his pole-sitting team mate, the Red Bulls and, I think, a Ferrari. On the second run, however, normal service was resumed and we have another Hamilton-Rosberg front row. Verstappen and Ricciardo are next and, reportedly, the Red Bull has been rather quick on the long runs.

Must say I’m surprised Ferrari are only on the third row. Whilst the gap to Ricciardo (for Vettel) is just a tenth of a second, it’s still a shade disappointing for the Prancing Horse.

Punching above their weight on the fourth row are the two Force Indias, with Perez ahead of Hulkenberg. Tasty grid slots for the team battling with Williams. Button did well to get 9th, whilst Massa could manage only 10th.

The weather forecast has a small chance of rain, but likely to be dry.

I had been hoping for rain, as I think some interesting Red Bull, Hulkenberg and Button bets could’ve been opened up by soggy conditions (it also would’ve drastically hampered Rosberg, I think).

Bets that sprang to mind:
Rosberg to lead lap 1
Ricciardo podium
No Safety Car

Rosberg is 3.25 to lead the first lap. Hmm. Not value. There’s the potential for the Red Bulls to start very well, Hamilton to do ok or Rosberg to cock it up.

Ricciardo’s just 2.2 for a podium. Not remotely tempting.

No Safety Car is 2.25. Whilst not super tasty, with the extra gravel traps, it is worth considering.

As is now traditional, I then perused the markets hoping to find some ludicrous value. Here’s what caught my eye, to a greater or lesser extent:
Rosberg, win, 4.8 (Betfair), hedge 2.4

That’s pretty much it. Rosberg was out of sorts in qualifying, but the Mercedes has been very good in clear air. If he can get the jump at the start he has a strong chance of winning and the hedge may be matched immediately. There’s also the safety car bet.

On balance, I decided the No Safety Car bet at 2.25 was the better value. Rosberg's been a bit off-kilter this weekend and Red Bull may be a threat. 

Just the one tip: No Safety Car, 2.25, Ladbrokes.

The race starts at 8am. Intrigued to see how Red Bull and Force India do.


Morris Dancer

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

F1 2014 - Second and Third Tests

Japan: early discussion

America: pre-race