But Reynolds is definitely the form man, not just because of his round-winning runs at the second and third rounds of this season's Battery Town Porsche GT3 Cup Challenge either. This time last year the dynamic young Melbourne driver scored a clean Battery Town Porsche GT3 Cup Challenge championship sweep at the tight, technical Timaru circuit, qualifying quickest (from Baird and young Auckland driver Mark Russ) and winning all three races, including the reverse top-six grid final.
Also, if last weekend's Battery Town round at Invercargill's Teretonga Park Raceway is anything to go by, Saturday morning's qualifying session at Timaru will provide as much excitement as the races with Reynolds, Baird and Halliday never more than a few hundredths of a second apart as they fought a battle royal for pole position.
Halliday made the initial running but it was Reynolds who eventually stopped the clocks quickest with a best time of 57.854 - albeit just 0.007 of a second better than Baird's 57.861 and 0.021 better than the 57.875 set by Halliday.
Daniel Gaunt joined Halliday on the second row of the grid with the lowest time in the 58 second bracket - 58.307 - with Jonny Reid, Mitch Cunningham, young gun Courtney Letica - on the comeback trail after a heavy qualifying crash at the second round - Triple X Motorsport team boss Shane McKillen and series stalwart Andrew Bagnall all lapping under the minute mark.
Best of the drivers contesting the Mothers 996 Cup for older model GT3 Cup cars was again Hugh Gardiner, the Aucklander quickest in his category in qualifying and each race, splitting 997 drivers Shane McKillen and Andrew Bagnall in the first race and dicing for track position with them in the second and third.
Heading to Timaru, however, it is series rookie Simon McLennan who retains the points lead in the Mothers 996 Cup standings, Gardiner having missed out on a valuable double-points opportunity of his own when he failed to finish The Mad Butcher 100km mini enduro at the second round of the Battery Town series in Christchurch late last year.
The Mothers 996 Cup category has come into its own this season with the arrival of young guns McLennan and Simon Evans (19-year-old brother of rising single-seater star Mitch and eldest son of well-known Porsche racer and New Zealand Land Speed record holder Owen Evans) and the addition to the field of the likes of Bridgestone Porsche Series graduate Colin Caldwell and - making his Battery Town series debut at Teretonga - Dunedin driver Allan Dippie.