The F1 returns for race number 20 of the season in Mexico City, Mexico where Max Verstappen enters the track looking to make history as a two-time F1 world champion.
Last time out in Austin, Texas the Dutch driver claimed another victory in fiercely contested race, making it 13 wins for the season so far to equal the record for the most in a season.
We’ll take a look ahead to the next race and see if we can provide you with some extra cash for the rest of the summer with our best free F1 betting picks.
F1 Mexico GP | |||
---|---|---|---|
Max Verstappen | -165 | -175 | -165 |
Charles Leclerc | +475 | +450 | +440 |
Sergio Perez | +400 | +450 | +480 |
Carlos Sainz | +1200 | +1200 | +1200 |
Lewis Hamilton | +1200 | +1200 | +1025 |
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There is no doubt that Verstappen has been the best Formula 1 driver in the world this year. The Red Bull star has won 13 of the 19 races in 2022 and claimed 14 podium finishes in the last 16 races, showing his true dominance on the track.
Verstappen finds himself miles clear atop the F1 World Drivers’ Championship standings thanks to his unrivalled performances but will want to continue that dominance with another win here. He has already been crowned champion, and will want to show why on one of the more entertaining tracks on the calendar.
The current record for most wins in a season is 13, held by the great Michael Schumacher (18 races) and Sebastian Vettel (19 races), and the Dutch driver has a chance to smash through that tally here, with three races remaining.
He’s got the best car, is the best driver, and has shown countless times that he can overcome adversity and it seems like an easy bet. Nobody has won on this track more than he has, and he’s our F1 betting pick for the race.
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It’s not been the best of seasons for Leclerc, and he saw his final chances of becoming champion go up in smoke when he was overtaken on the line in Japan.
If the 24-year-old performs to the best of his ability and Ferrari picks the right strategy, he could certainly take the chequered flag if things fall his way. But if he makes another mistake or the team lets him down once again, he will struggle to compete for P1 and potentially even the podium. The latter seems to be the most likely as it has been the story of the season.
Leclerc won two of the first three races this year, and on top of that, he notched a couple of P2 finishes across the opening five outings. But with two DNFs in the next five, he failed to secure a single podium in any of those races.
The Monegasque won the Austrian Grand Prix in July, but the good times didn’t last long. A fortnight later, Leclerc crashed out of the French GP while leading the race – adding another error to his catalog and gifting Verstappen the win. He has finished second, second, third and third in each of the last four races behind the Red Bull cars every time.
At some point he’ll get pole and win the race, but this is one of Verstappen’s favourite tracks so it won’t be here.
Perez ended a run of just two podium finishes in his last eight races, with two DNF’s also in that run, by winning the Singapore GP in a race that was rather uneventful, to say the least and then sealed the title for Verstappen when he overtook Leclerc on the line in Japan. He also finished third last week in the USA to keep his momentum going.
He is performing well and driving like the talent we all know he is, making all the right decisions at the right times and being rewarded for it currently with good performances and results. It’s a shame for him that this wasn’t the pattern of his season.
Red Bull have a brilliant chance to claim victory in Mexico to celebrate their constructers’ championship win, but if anyone is going to get that joy it’ll be the reigning champion and not his understudy, so Perez is a long shot for this one.
The seven-time world champion has won twice on this track before, and was so close to getting his first win of the season in the USA but just couldn’t hold of Verstappen’s super car.
Following three successive third-place finishes in Canada, Britain, and Austria, the Englishman secured back-to-back P2 finishes in France and Hungary.
He loves this track as previously mentioned, but he hasn’t won here since 2019.
Sitting outside the top five of the Driver’s Championship standings is unfamiliar for the Brit, but he knows how to win races and if he can get to the front he’ll be confident of staying there.
He does have history against him, with no driver ever winning a race beyond their 300th F1 appearance, but if anyone can topple that statistic, it’s the man who will be in the argument for greatest of all time when his career is done so that it could be worth a flutter.
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