This was Paddon's first World Rally Championship outing since February in Sweden. He made a good start to his truncated 2018 campaign coming home in fifth less than a minute behind race winner Thierry Neuville.
Not so good in Portugal though. This might just now be his bogey event having his car catch fire in 2016 and then grinding to halt in 2017 with a mechanical drama. Three starts and three DNFs.
After a successful New Zealand rally campaign during his hiatus from the main game where he was unbeaten in each rally he contested, in fact he didn't lose a stage, I wonder if he was too much on the limit in Portugal.
This will probably sound counter intuitive to most racers, but I wonder if maybe the best rally driver we've ever had might just be trying too hard to prove a point. He was leading the rally in the early stages and maybe could have dialed back a notch to finish inside the top three and get valuable manufacturer points for Hyundai and potential keep his seat next year. Just saying …
There's a snooze fest in Monaco this weekend at the annual 'follow the leader' around the streets of the principality and my only hope is that Brendon Hartley can get his mojo going. The jungle drums are beating and the neigh-sayers are circling suggesting, that while he might have been good enough to be given a chance, is he good enough to stay?
There will be a queue of youngster with dad's deep pockets waiting to pounce.
I will have one eye on Monaco because of Hartley, but I will have both eyes and my entire attention focused on the Indianapolis 500 on Monday morning where Scott Dixon will start from ninth in the greatest spectacle in racing!