Singapore: pre-qualifying

NB articles may be more concise or released at odd times this race weekend, and next, because I’m pressed for time.

Singapore’s a tedious processional low-speed street circuit. Nice for Red Bull, bad for Williams, engine grunt matters far less here than at the last couple of tracks.

As you would expect, tyres are soft and supersoft. Rain is forecast for both Saturday and Sunday, but too early to affect either qualifying or the race, although paying attention to that is clearly wise.

Off-track, Volkswagen may buy Red Bull. The team has indicated they’ll scweam and scweam and quit the sport if they don’t have a competitive engine next year. Unsure what’ll happen to Toro Rosso [under the VW deal, Red Bull would use a VW engine, though it’s unclear whether that’d be from day one or if they’d use Ferrari engines in the intervening period].

Rosberg was fastest in P1, four-tenths up on Hamilton, unsurprisingly. Ricciardo was less than a tenth back, followed by Vettel, Raikkonen and Bottas. Verstappen came next, with Hulkenberg, Sainz and Maldonado rounding out the top 10.

Quite surprisingly, Kvyat was fastest in P2, less than a tenth ahead of Raikkonen. Ricciardo was less than a tenth further back, followed by Hamilton (one gets the feeling Mercedes weren’t really trying). Vettel and Perez were next, with Rosberg only 7th. Alonso, Hulkenberg and Verstappen finish off the top 10.

Somewhat surprisingly, Eddie Jordan (speaking on Inside F1) suggested Mercedes were ‘floundering’. I still think they’ll get pole but it might be rather tighter than I’d anticipated.

The increase in speed from supersoft to soft appears to be less for Mercedes than Ferrari and Red Bull (which has implications not only for qualifying but also for the race). Also highly likely there’s some Silver Arrow sandbagging, so how real the gap is remains open to question.

In P3 Vettel was half a second ahead of his team mate, with Raikkonen less than a tenth ahead of Kvyat. Ricciardo was two-tenths further back, with Hamilton nearly half a second down the road. Rosberg was four-tenths down on his team mate and less than a tenth ahead of Alonso. Sainz, Verstappen and Ericsson followed close behind.

However, it’s worth noting Vettel was fastest in P3 ahead of Monaco qualifying by a large distance, and still failed to get pole. On the other hand, the Ferrari engine appears to have a better qualifying mode now than then, and the time gap in P3 was even larger than in Monaco.

Bets for qualifying that spring to mind:
Vettel pole
Alonso Q3
Red Bull top score [for the race]
Verstappen Q3
Raikkonen top 3 [qualifying]
Kvyat top 3 [qualifying]

Vettel was just 2.6 for pole, which is mean given Mercedes has had every pole since Austria last year. Weirdly, Hamilton was all the way out to 3. Hmm.

Kvyat being 3.35 for top 3 is interesting. Raikkonen at 2.6 for the same market is too short.

Alonso evens for Q3 is too short to tempt. Verstappen at 1.5 is even less alluring.

On consideration, I’ve gone for two bets (both Betfair):
Vettel, pole, 2.56 (hedged 1.1)
Hamilton, pole, 3.55 (hedged 1.1)

In my view, only one of those two are likely to take pole. The bet and short odds hedging should mean if either do, qualifying will be green, and if form varies wildly from Q2 to Q3, which is possible, then it could improve things.

As an aside, Maldonado is 1.83 not to be classified.


Morris Dancer

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