Guy just hoping to avoid embarrassment

Guy Sebastian is in with a real shot of winning Eurovision but the Australian is taking a softly, softly approach on the eve of the contest.

Australia in with a chance at Eurovision finals

Guy Sebastian (C) representing Australia performs during rehearsals for the Grand Final of the 60th annual Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria, 22 May 2015. Source: APA

Guy Sebastian is one of the favourites heading into the Eurovision Song Contest grand final but the Australian is talking down his chances, insisting he's simply hoping to avoid embarrassment.

Sebastian's song Tonight Again has created a buzz in Vienna with the bookies ranking him in the top five of 27 finalists.

But the 33-year-old former Idol winner and X Factor judge isn't getting carried away by all the hype.

"A little competitive side of me just doesn't want to come dead last," he told reporters at the Stadthalle arena on Friday night (Saturday morning AEST).

"Because it wouldn't be nice doing interviews in the morning with Australia and them going 'So you embarrassed us - don't come back'."

One reporter pondered aloud whether Prime Minister Tony Abbott should knight Sebastian if Australia - which was invited to compete as a wild card entry - won the title.

"Well, he's handing them out willy-nilly," the ARIA winner replied.

Sebastian will perform 12th on Saturday night - just before the interval.

Artists tend to do better if they're in the second half of the show but SBS co-host Julia Zemiro says that late in the opening section is a-okay too.

Austria's Conchita Wurst won in 2014 after performing 11th.

Sebastian himself just wants to get on with the show after six weeks of intense preparation.

"I just want to do it now," he said on Friday night.

"There's been such a huge build-up and numerous run throughs and rehearsals and, as a performer, you just build it up and build it up and you just want to get it done so that you can breathe a sigh of relief."

The Malaysian-born South Australian is backing Sweden to win.

Mans Zelmerlow, 28, has a cool song and even cooler on-stage big-screen graphics.

"For me, I thought Sweden was outstanding (in rehearsal)," Sebastian said.

He also rates Latvia, Belgium, Russia, Norway and Serbia.

The Australian has pared back his own stage show after deciding the initial concept had too much lighting and "pyros".

"We're really happy with where it's at now," he said on the eve of the grand final.

"It's not too much, it's just simple - we just wanted to put on a show that was fun and that people didn't have to think too much about.

"It's not so graphic focused (now) it's about the vibe and the fun and the soul and its delivery."

Australian delegation head Paul Clarke thinks Sebastian could win the jury vote which makes up 50 per cent of a performer's score.

Then if the European nations split the public vote Australia could surprise.

"That's what happened with Conchita Wurst in 2014," Clarke said.

"She did not carry the eastern bloc at all but she had so many jury votes, and she did so well in western Europe, that she won."

Clarke says countries including Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK have already indicated they like Sebastian.

But he admitted the eastern European nations were more sceptical about Australia being in Eurovision at all.

He told AAP while 75 per cent of entrants are supportive the other 25 per cent are less enamoured with the Aussie interlopers.

Semi-Final 1 Friday 22 May 7:30pm | Semi-Final 2 Saturday 23 May 7:30pm | Grand Final Sunday 24 May 7:30pm


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Source: AAP


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Guy just hoping to avoid embarrassment | SBS News