Formula One’s Las Vegas Grand Prix is Saturday night, or early Sunday morning in the U.S.’s Eastern Time Zone, which means one of the flashiest, fanciest, ritziest sports heads to one of the flashiest, fanciest, ritziest cities in the world. Max Verstappen entered the week as the betting favorite to win the race, but after qualifying Verstappen is fourth in the odds.
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Mercedes has been the surprise of the weekend, both showing well in practice and then claiming pole position with George Russell. Still, the betting odds like the Ferrari cars more. Following qualifying, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz is the favorite with +200 odds (2-to-1) on BetMGM and his teammate, Charles Leclerc, is right behind at +225 (9-to-4). Sainz will start on the front row next to Russell while Leclerc was fourth in qualifying. Russell is third in the odds at +350 (7-to-2) followed by Red Bull driver Max Verstappen, who will start in fifth position and is +500 (5-to-1) to win the race.
Las Vegas Grand Prix odds
McLaren’s Lando Norris was among the favorites earlier in the weekend, but only qualified sixth. He is fifth in the odds at +900 (9-to-1).
The shocker of qualifying is that Alpine driver Pierre Gasly will start third. Don’t expect that to translate to a race win though. He is still a long shot at +10000 (100-to-1).
While Verstappen had been the clear favorite in previous seasons and even the first portion of this season, it’s not the same ole, same ole in F1. Verstappen has won the last three drivers’ championships, two of which were complete runaways. He won 15 races in 2022, 19 races in 2023 and started this season in dominant fashion. The Dutch driver took pole position in each of the first seven grands prix this season and won seven of the first 10 races. Verstappen’s dominance was reflected in the odds. He was often around even money or even a minus odds favorite against the entire field.
GO DEEPERBigger, bolder, smoother? Inside F1 Las Vegas' plans for a successful sequelThat has changed though. Verstappen has taken pole just once in the last 15 races and has one win in the last 11. He is coming off that one win, which was a few weeks ago in Brazil, but wet conditions and a red flag mid-race aided his climb from the bottom after starting the race in 17th.
While Verstappen’s Red Bull car was once clearly the fastest in the field, that no longer appears to be the case. McLaren and Ferrari have enjoyed more success for months and have passed Red Bull in the constructors’ championship, which seemed unthinkable in June.
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The fact that Verstappen was ever favored feels like a surprise. Verstappen’s teammate, Sergio Pérez, hasn’t finished in the top five of a race since the Miami Grand Prix in early May. That’s both a knock on Pérez and a sign of Verstappen’s talent that he has been able to have success in a Red Bull car that has clearly fallen behind others in the field.
In short, if you haven’t been paying attention to F1 much this year, races have become competitive, and Verstappen looks more like an elite driver dragging a mediocre car into good positions than a certainty on the level of death and taxes.
Verstappen on the verge of clinching again
Verstappen’s win in Brazil may have cemented his fourth straight drivers’ championship. There are only two more races after Las Vegas, and Verstappen leads Norris by 62 points. He can clinch the championship in Las Vegas. There are many clinching scenarios for Verstappen this weekend, but the simplest is if Norris doesn’t outscore Verstappen, then Verstappen will have wrapped up the championship.
Constructors’ battle still on
Unlike the battle for the top spot among the drivers, the constructors’ championship still feels like a competition. McLaren is in the lead with 593 points, 36 ahead of Ferrari. Red Bull is 13 behind Ferrari in third place (49 behind McLaren). McLaren won’t be able to clinch the championship during Saturday’s race.
The odds on BetMGM give McLaren a massive edge at -700 (1-to-7). Ferrari is +400 (4-to-1) to make a comeback, while Red Bull is a huge long shot at +5000 (50-to-1).
More Las Vegas Grand Prix coverage
Inside F1 Las Vegas’ plans for a successful sequel — and no drain cover drama
F1’s Las Vegas Strip Circuit: The layout and origins of America’s newest grand prix
F1’s second Las Vegas GP bet is paying off. The first, 43 years ago, was a ‘lesson learned’
(Photo of Charles Leclerc: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)
Dan Santaromita is a senior editor for sports betting at The Athletic. Dan previously wrote for NBC Sports Chicago and ProSoccerUSA. He is a University of Missouri graduate who resides in Chicago. Follow Dan on Twitter @TheDanSanto