Mjällby AIF v AIK Fotboll
The market is leaning Mjällby here, and the case starts with home defensive solidity. They've conceded just 0.60 goals a game across their last ten at Strandvallen, carry a +170 Elo edge over AIK, and the price has shortened as kickoff approaches even as their own form has cooled to four winless matches in a row.
The complication is that AIK have quietly built one of the better away records in the league, taking nine of their sixteen points on the road and sitting unbeaten in four straight away trips. History also leans their way in a broader sense, just one defeat in the last eleven meetings against Mjällby across all competitions, even though Mjällby broke that pattern with a 2-0 win the last time these two met at this ground. AIK's injury list is significant enough to question how much of that away form they can sustain here.
So the likeliest pattern is Mjällby controlling the game through their defensive structure and looking to nick it via Bergström or Manneh, while AIK sit in and lean on the road resilience that's carried them to points at tougher venues than this one. Both sides' attacking ratings are close to identical, which points toward a tight, low-event match rather than either team imposing their season-long identity fully.
From a betting perspective, Under 2.5 is the standout with the model well clear of the market's own number, and BTTS No pairs with it given Mjällby's stingy home rate. Mjällby to win also grades out ahead of its market price versus the model, with the draw holding some secondary value given how the model splits this closer than the odds suggest. The likelier scoreline feels like 1-0 Mjällby, with 1-1 the swing outcome if AIK's away form holds up one more week.
Aalesund v Molde
The market is leaning Molde here, and the case starts with the tactical and historical gap. They control the ball at 59% to Aalesund's 42.7%, they've won five of the last six meetings between these two, and they arrive on a ten-match streak of scoring against this exact opponent away from home. Emil Breivik and Fredrik Gulbrandsen give them the sharper attacking names on paper too.
The complication is that Molde on the road this season looks nothing like Molde at home. Seven defeats in their last ten away matches, just 0.80 goals a game scored and 1.70 conceded in that stretch, is a serious form dip that the head-to-head history doesn't capture. Aalesund, meanwhile, are unbeaten in four straight at Color Line Stadion and the most recent meeting at this exact ground was a 3-1 upset win for the hosts, so the venue has already shown it can flip the expected script.
So the likeliest pattern is Molde controlling possession and passing through the game, but Aalesund's defensive fragility, eleven straight matches conceding, cuts both ways: it should let Molde's control translate into goals, while Aalesund's own 88% scoring rate this season means they're unlikely to go quiet at home even while shipping chances. This looks less like a one-sided technical mismatch and more like a track record of goals at both ends regardless of who controls the run of play.
From a betting perspective, Aalesund +0.25 stands out given the model rates their true win-or-draw probability well above the market's price, largely on the back of Molde's road struggles. Over 2.5 and BTTS Yes both line up cleanly too, given Aalesund's home scoring rate and Molde's leaky away defense. The likelier scoreline feels like 1-2 Molde, with a repeat Aalesund upset the live swing scenario given how the venue has trended.
Tromsø IL v Vålerenga
The market is leaning Tromsø here, and the case starts with the home and away splits. Tromsø have won seven of their last ten at Romssa Arena and sit unbeaten in five straight home meetings with this exact opponent, while Vålerenga arrive on a three-game away losing streak and have dropped eight of their last ten on the road. The gap in league position, second against ninth, lines up with everything else in the profile.
The complication is that Vålerenga's away form is a defensive problem more than an attacking one. They're still generating volume, 19 shots in their last outing against Kristiansund, and have been involved in genuine shootouts recently with 22 goals across their last six matches combined. Their issue is conceding 2.40 goals a game on the road, which is exactly the kind of leak Tromsø's control-based approach, 51% possession and 83% passing, is built to exploit, even if Tromsø themselves looked toothless in a goalless draw with KFUM Oslo before the break.
So the likeliest pattern is Tromsø dictating tempo and territory for long stretches, while Vålerenga's defensive fragility away from home means whatever chances Tromsø create are more likely to go in than usual. Vålerenga's own attacking output gives them a puncher's chance to make it messy rather than a clean shutout in Tromsø's favor, which is why the goals market leans toward both ends finding the net rather than a comfortable one-sided scoreline.
From a betting perspective, Tromsø to win at 1.78 holds value with expert models rating it higher than the market's own number, and Over 2.5 stacks on top given Vålerenga's leaky away defense feeding a Tromsø attack that scores 1.90 a game at home. The likelier scoreline feels like 2-1 Tromsø, with 1-1 the swing outcome if Tromsø's recent finishing struggles resurface.
Norway v England
The market is leaning England here, and the case is built on depth and defensive discipline. They kept clean sheets throughout qualifying, Harry Kane has six goals and Bellingham is peaking at the right time, and a statistical model has them favored to advance at 65%. Declan Rice screening the space between the lines is the mechanism that's supposed to make it work, cutting the supply line to Haaland before he ever gets isolated against Stones or Guehi.
The complication is that England's defense has looked far shakier than its attack this tournament, conceding in three of their last four including twice against Mexico, and now has to reshuffle after Jarell Quansah's suspension. Haaland leads the World Cup with seven goals and Norway have scored in every single match, which means England likely needs something close to a perfect defensive performance to keep a clean sheet, something they haven't managed recently even against lesser attacks than this one.
So the likeliest pattern is England controlling more of midfield through Rice and their attacking depth creating the better volume of chances, while Norway looks to break quickly and get the ball to Haaland in space rather than sustain pressure. Both sides have shown they can be got at defensively, Norway have conceded the most of any quarter-finalist at nine, which points toward a game with goals at both ends rather than a controlled, low-event England win.
From a betting perspective, England to win at 1.91 lines up with a model that actually rates them higher than the market price, and BTTS Yes plus Over 2.5 both stack cleanly given Norway's ever-present scoring streak and England's recent defensive cracks. Kane anytime scorer is worth a look too given his current form. The likelier scoreline feels like 2-1 England, with Haaland the most live threat to flip that if Norway's counter clicks early.
Argentina v Switzerland
The market is leaning heavily Argentina here, and the case starts with the history and the man carrying it. They've never lost to Switzerland in seven meetings, Messi leads the tournament with eight goals and just delivered a stoppage-time comeback for the ages against Egypt, and Argentina have scored in every match this World Cup. The market has them around 58% to win outright and higher still to advance.
The complication is that Switzerland have quietly built the tournament's meanest defense, just two goals conceded in six matches and four straight clean sheets, anchored by Akanji and Elvedi in front of Kobel. Xhaka and Freuler's double pivot did exactly the job needed to shut out Colombia for 120 minutes, and that same defensive compression is designed specifically to force Argentina wide and away from the half-spaces Enzo Fernandez and Mac Allister want to exploit. Argentina's own backline has looked shakier than the results suggest, and Embolo and Ndoye give Switzerland a real look on the counter if Argentina's fullbacks push too high.
So the likeliest pattern is Argentina dominating the ball and forcing Switzerland into a deep, disciplined block for long stretches, while Switzerland picks its moments through Embolo's physicality and Ndoye's pace rather than sustained pressure. Both teams also arrive carrying real fatigue from brutal round of 16 matches, Argentina's iconic comeback and Switzerland's 120 minutes plus shootout against Colombia, which argues for fewer clean chances rather than more even against this much attacking talent.
From a betting perspective, Argentina to win at 1.73-1.80 lines up with some model that rates them even higher, and Messi anytime scorer is worth following given his current form and history against Switzerland. Under 2.5 and BTTS No both grade out well given Switzerland's defensive record and Manzambi's absence blunting their own attack. The likelier scoreline feels like 1-0 or 2-1 Argentina, with Switzerland's low block the main thing standing between this and a more comfortable margin.