Barely seven days after our last race prediction just, um, a week ago, dotdotdotcomma is delighted to be able to respond to the unprecedented levels of demand we would have liked to experience, and present our forecast for this weekend's race in China.
The forecast for Malaysia yielded just two correct predictions, namely Michael ComebackerSCHUMACHER, MICHAEL
 Michael expresses his remorse at having dangerously forced a rival off the track. Again. When he wasn't driving people off the road, ramming other cars, parking in the middle of the track or trying to punch David Coulthard, Michael Schumacher displayed a dazzling talent for finding new ways to disadvatage his team-mate. We're being slightly churlish, of course, but Schumacher's reputation as a driver will forever be coloured by the unsporting manner in which he raced. His first break in F1 came with Jordan at Spa in 1991 and his second with Ferrari at Silverstone in 1999, when he fractured a leg crashing at Stowe. His final F1 drive through the field at Interlagos was a reminder of what his legacy could have been if he hadn't been quite so ready to tarnish it quite so frequently. The wanker. TIGRA 16v: The tooltip with lowered suspension and a racing windscreen wiper in ninth and Marion Johnwaynesfirstname in 23rd place, and although that's not going to make anybody rich, it is at least a 100% increase in successful predictions over our first attempt for Australia.
We did manage to pick the drivers who finished in first and second places but, crucially, they were in the wrong order and from this we observe that anyone foolish enough to gamble actual hard currency based on our predictions would be well advised - if it's not already too late - to stick firmly to each-way bets.
And who would have predicted that Felipe MassiveshuntMASSA, FELIPE
 The view from Felipe Massa's car for most of the 2008 British Grand Prix. Pretty much since his F1 debut with Sauber in 2002, Felipe Massa has been doing his best to shake off his reputation as a driver who is fast but wild, while for roughly the same period, dotdotdotcomma has been doing its best to reinforce that reputation. It's not that we harbour any particular dislike of the chap but Massa is no more capable of changing his underlying nature than he is of, oh, I don't know, not spinning five times in the wet at Silverstone in 2008. During the duller parts of a Formula One season, it's nice to have someone a bit mad in the field for the occasional moments of insanity they provide and ever since Takuma Sato left the sport, Massa is the best we have. That said, Massa has been guilty at times of Ferrarigance, which is a word we've just made up for the special brand of arrogance only a fully brainwashed Ferrari team member can display. His ridiculous protestations that Fernando Alonso had impeded him during qualifying at Monza in 2006 readily spring to mind, as does his failure to acknowledge that his spin at Fuji in 2008 had been caused when he turned in on Sebatien Bourdais. On both occasions, of course, the stewards favoured the bloke in red. In any case, F1 would probably be less of a spectacle without loonies like Massa and "fast but wild" is not a bad epithet to have. It could be a lot worse. Just look at what we've called Michael Schumacher or Jacques Villeneuve. TIGRA 16v: The tooltip with lowered suspension and a racing windscreen wiper would finish one place ahead of Fernando AlongtimesincehislastchampionshipALONSO, FERNANDO
 Fernando always keeps abreast of the latest technical developments. Alonso's full name is Fernando Alonso Diaz and few people realise that he is the half-brother of Cameron Diaz, the well-known jizz-haired actress. His success in Formula One has led to a huge growth of interest in the sport in his home country of Spain, where not so long ago you could easily pick up cheap tickets to the Grand Prix and pretty much have your pick of seats, so thanks for that, Fernando. Like many of the sport's stars, Alonso began his F1 career with Minardi and he made a splash at his first race, where he out-qualified his team-mate by over two and a half seconds. That margin is rendered slightly less impressive when you learn that his team-mate was Tarso Marques who, as racing drivers go, has a lovely personality. Fernando was soon snapped up by Renault, where he spent a year testing before being promoted to a race seat. He became the then youngest world champion in 2005 and the youngest double champion in 2006. There followed an abbreviated tenure at McLaren which failed to yield a third title, largely because he proved unable to beat a rookie, after which he was welcomed back to the Renault team, where he is expected to wait grumpily until a Ferrari seat becomes available. Alonso is an exceptionally talented and complete racing driver but he also has a reckless - often self-destructive - streak and an eccentrically unique take on what it means to be a team-player, traits which have doubtless closed a number of F1 doors to him. In 2005 he was appointed one of UNICEF's Goodwill Ambassadors, which may explain why he never has any left for anyone else. TIGRA 16v: The tooltip with lowered suspension and a racing windscreen wiper, now that team orders are now almost encouraged? Not us. And that's a racing certainty.
So, for everyone who enjoys predictions that bear little or no relation to the actual results, here's our forecast for China: 1 Sebastian Vettel
2 Lewis Hamilton
3 Mark Webber
4 Jenson Button
5 Fernando Alonso
6 Felipe Massa
7 Nick Heidfeld
8 Pastor Maldonado
9 Vitaly Petrov
10 Kamui Kobayashi
11 Sergio Perez
12 Nico Rosberg
13 Paul di Resta
14 Michael Schumacher
15 Rubens Barrichello
16 Jarno Trulli
17 Adrian Sutil
18 Heikki Kovalainen
19 Jaime Alguersuari
20 Sebastien Buemi
21 Narain Karthikeyan
22 Jerome D'Ambrosio
23 Timo Glock
24 Vitantonio Liuzzi
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