It’s only been two races, but a lot has elapsed since we
last covered F1 here. Fernando Alonso’s handy gap has tuned into a lead that on
the face of things seems purely mathematical going by the pace that the Red Bulls
have showed in the last two races, especially at Suzuka last weekend where
Sebastian Vettel had a leisurely 15 seconds in hand at the end and Mark Webber managed
to sneak a point from a first lap accident that should have put him out of the
race.
One week on in Korea and that seems to be the same case once
again, with the Red Bulls not only going 1-2 in FP2 but also dominating qualifying,
and a front row forecast of Vettel and Webber is 6/4 going into tomorrow’s
race. Given how they had 0.3 seconds in hand and have and an excellent record
around tracks with long, sweeping corners – of which Korea contains plenty -
then that must be tempting.
Sebastian Vettel – who was held up in his flying lap and
lost out on pole by just a tenth of a second – is a strong favourite for a hat
trick of wins and he looks a worthy one, considering that he has the skills to
beat his team mate into the first corner and hold a lead, but also considering
a possible team tactics move. 10/11 is fair enough considering but nothing’s guaranteed
in these races and it’s another driver that has our interest.
Button has always been a raceday specialist over a
qualifying one and recorded the fastest high fuel lap in FP3, coming second
only to Alonso on a lap by lap average (admittedly he did only 13 over the
session), so we know that he has some of the best race pace on the grid, and
this wouldn’t be the first time that he’s recovered a poor grid postion for a
good result, having turned 6th into second at Hockenheim and jumped
four places from his eighth place on the grid in Suzuka (where he could easily
have caught Kobayashi for third late on).
Since Hockenheim (the first GP for Mclaren’s updated car) he
has form figures of 2-6-1-ret-2-4, even more impressive when you consider he
looked booked for second in Monza before retirement, and while the initial value
has gone out of his odds for a top 6 finish, 5/4 is still more than backable,
along with the 10/11 on him winning Bet Victor’s Group B, which requires him to
beat both Mercedes and Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg, something he’s more than
capable of based on not only race pace but also driving ability. Either is good
but we’ll split a hefty stake accordingly based on the perceived difficulty of
the task at hand, and to win Group C Button may not even have to make the Top 6
based on grid spots, so that’ll get the biggest portion of our stake.
Advice
6 pts Jenson Button to win Bet Victor’s Group C (10/11)
3 pts Jenson Button Top 6 finish (5/4 general)
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