Spain go into this match as clear favourites: the model gives them 57% to win against 23% for the visitors, with a draw priced at 20%. The numbers reflect both the home advantage and Spain's recent run of form, while Cape Verde Islands's away record this season has been below the league baseline. Goal-scoring expectation lands at 57% over 2.5, and BTTS at 53% — figures that suggest a comfortable home win is the cleanest read, with an asian handicap on the favourites offering the best value compared to the straight three-way market.
Spain and Cape Verde Islands arrive at June 15, 2026's FIFA World Cup 2026 fixture with profiles that produce one of the more interesting statistical contrasts of the round. Spain generate consistent xG in the central penalty-area zone but underperform in conversion — a hint that finishing under pressure remains the main bottleneck. Cape Verde Islands are the inverse: lower volume, higher quality. Their typical match flow involves long defensive phases followed by sharp counter-attacking moves that arrive into the box with two or three runners.
Possession in this fixture will likely settle around 55–45, with the hosts holding the ball more without that translating cleanly into pressure. The deeper question is what happens in the wide channels. Spain's full-backs push high to feed the wingers; Cape Verde Islands have built their counter-game around exploiting exactly those vacated zones. Look for the visiting wide forwards to stay narrow when not on the ball, then stretch wide on the break.
Statistical models pricing this match come out close: home win in the low 40s, draw mid-20s, away in the high 20s. That distribution argues against value in the standard three-way market and pushes attention to secondary markets — total corners, both-teams-to-score, and especially the first-half result, where both managers' historical conservatism has produced more goalless openings than the league average.