No matter where he starts on the grid, David Alonso seems to manage to find a way to finish on top and that’s why he’s the favorite to win the Moto3 championship for 2024.
Currently, Alonso is set as the +138 chalk to earn this season’s Moto3 title. Colin Veijer is the +175 second betting choice.
Alonso set out from 10th to begin last week’s race in Australia. The Colombian rider worked his way through the field and wound up winning the race by 2.936 seconds.
No other rider is given odds shorter than +1000 to win the title. Let’s take a look at the latest Moto3 odds. And don’t forget to check in regularly with the top Vegas sports betting sites for the latest updates on this week’s racing.
Moto3 Championship Odds | Bovava | ||
---|---|---|---|
David Alonso | +138 | +138 | +138 |
Colin Veijer | +175 | +175 | +175 |
David Munoz | +1600 | +1600 | +1600 |
Ivan Ortola | +1600 | +1600 | +1600 |
Taiyo Furusato | +1600 | +1600 | +1600 |
Daniel Holgato | +2200 | +2200 | +2200 |
Tatsuki Suzuki | +2200 | +2200 | +2200 |
Ryusei Yamanaka | +4000 | +4000 | +4000 |
Stefano Nepa | +8000 | +8000 | +8000 |
After Alsono and Veijer, Ivan Ortola, Taiyo Furusato and David Munoz are all in a group at +1600.
Prior to making any bets on the Moto3 championship odds, you definitely should be taking advantage of these Vegas betting site bonuses. As well, it’s wise to remember that all of the top Vegas betting sites are delivering easy to access downloadable apps. This will make it much simpler when the time arrives to be placing your bets from your favorite mobile device.
With his win in Australia, Alsonso is poised to be making Moto3 history as the riders arrive in Thailand for this week’s race. That was the 11th victory of the 2024 Moto3 season for the CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team rider.
He’s now deaadlocked for the all-time single-season win mark in Moto3 with legendary Italian rider Valentino Rossi. Before going on to a sensational career in MotoGP, Rossi won 11 races in a single season in motorcycle racing’s lightweight class.
The win also is leaving Alonso with a series-leading 364 points. Can anyone track him down on track for a shot at the title? Let’s look at all the Moto3 championship contenders.
The Colombian rider has now won the past four Moto3 races after going two successive races without a win for the first time this season. Alonso won the season-opening event at Qatar and the rest of the field has been chasing him ever since.
He’s hit the podium in 12 of 17 races so far this season. Oddly enough, Alonso has been among the top three just once when he didn’t win a race. That was his second-place finish in the Moto3 event in Great Britain.
Veijer is slowly letting the season get away from him. He was 18th in Australia. Just two races earlier in Indonesia, the Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP rider retired from the race.
He’s slid to third in the overall picture with 209 points. The Dutch rider has gone 14 races since he was posting his lone victory of the season in Spain.
Munoz has just one podium finish over the past six races, a third in Indonesia. He retired from consecutive races at Monza and Emilia Romagna.
The Spaniard has found his way to the podium just four times all season long. He’s still looking for his first win of the year.
It’s been a struggling season for the Japanese Team Honda rider. Furusato has failed to crack the top five in any of the past four races.
He’s gone nine races since finishing on the podium. That was a second-place finish at Germany.
If only Ortola could finish race weekends as effectively as he’s been starting them, then Alonso might have someone to worry about. He’s started on the pole in each of the last three races and in six races overall in 2024.
However, from those last three poles, Ortola retired from the race in Australia, finished 16th in Japan and wound up ninth in Indonesia. The Spaniard did win from pole position at Great Britain, but that was eight races ago.
Despite a solid second-place finish in Australia, moving him into second in the seasonal standings with 232 points, oddsmakers aren’t showing a lot of love to Holgato. The Spanish rider is the co-sixth betting choice with Japanese rider Tatsuki Suzuki.
There are reasons for that, though. Holgato’s second was also just his second podium finish in the past six races. He’s won just once all season, in the second race of the season in Portugal.
Can anyone hunt down Alonso over the final three races of the Moto3 season? That’s seems highly unlikely.
He’s a dominant force. Along with his 11 victories, the Colmbian rider also has earned pole position for six races. Twice. he’s posted the fastest lap of the race.
Overall, though, it’s all about consistency with Alonso. He’s right there in the hunt each and every week and most weeks, he’s leading the pack. That’s a hard formula to beat.
Bob Duff has been covering the online sports betting and casino industry since 2016. From major sporting events such as the NFL, NBA, MLB, UFC, NHL, Olympic Games and UEFA Champions League soccer, he’s also offered betting advice on such sports as chess, surfing, rugby and even marble racing. Duff has worked in the sports media industry since 1984. As a sports columnist with The Windsor Star, CanWest News Services, Postmedia and MSNBC.com, he covered a variety of major events, including the Stanley Cup final, World Cup of Hockey, Super Bowl, World Series, the 1996 Atlanta and 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games, NBA Finals, Ryder Cup, FIFA World Cup, NCAA Final Four and the Memorial Cup. Duff is partners in Detroit Hockey Now, a Detroit Red Wings web site. He is also the co-producer of the Give And Go Sport Education documentary that discusses the advantages of a multi-sport lifestyle in youth sport. He has also freelanced for such publications as The Hockey News, Beckett Hockey, Faceoff and Prospects Magazine. Duff is a contributor to The NHL Guide And Record Book, and Total Hockey, helped the NHL significantly in writing and research projects related to the league's 100th anniversary celebrations, and is listed as an honorary member of the Elias Sports Bureau. He is a member of the Professional Hockey Writers Association and the Baseball Writers Association Of America, through which he is on the writers’ committee that votes annually on the candidates for the Baseball Hall of Fame. As well, he is a published author of more than 25 books. Duff's books include The China Wall: The Timeless Legend of Johnny Bower; The Bruise Brothers: Hockey's Heavyweight Champions; Nicklas Lidstrom: The Pursuit of Perfection; Nine: A Tribute To Gordie Howe; Nineteen: A Tribute To Steve Yzerman; Seven: A Tribute to Ted Lindsay; and The History of Hockeytown; and I Wore 21: The Desmond Howard Story. Duff doesn’t merely write about sports, he plays them. He was an ice hockey goalie for 50 years, once famously winning a charity penalty shot shootout competition against NHL star Jason Spezza, and still plays rugby in the Niagara Rugby Union for Windsor Rogues RFC.