Who goes through
Switzerland to advance · 66%
Switzerland 66%Algeria 34%
most likely 90′ score 1–1 · ~29% reach extra time · ~19% reach a shootout
advance model: 90′ consensus (Elo+Futi) routed through extra time + a coin-flip shootout · neutral venue
How they got here
Round of 32 · Switzerland vs Algeria.
How the heat stacks up
Tactical preview
Round of 32 | M85 | 2026-07-02 · 11:00 PM ET | BC Place, Vancouver | TV TBD
Two 4-2-3-1 sides meet at BC Place, which means the tactical curiosity here is less about structural mismatch and more about which team bends first. Murat Yakin's Switzerland are the more shape-fluid of the two — the 4-2-3-1 is their familiar qualifying template, but a 3-4-3 and even a 4-4-2 have both appeared recently — and Yakin will have spent considerable time trying to figure out where Vladimir Petković's Algeria are most vulnerable and how Johan Manzambi best fits into that plan. Petković, for his part, has shown a willingness to tinker at halftime and between matches, so whatever Algeria present in the first twenty minutes is not necessarily what Switzerland will be managing in the last twenty.
The central tension of the tie is Switzerland's structural discipline against Algeria's transition threat. Granit Xhaka and Remo Freuler are a reliable pairing who make it genuinely difficult for opponents to play through the middle, and Algeria's Nabil Bentaleb and Hicham Boudaoui will need to find ways to shift them or go around them. The more likely avenue is the latter: Rayan Aït-Nouri on the wide left and Riyad Mahrez cutting in from the right are both capable of exploiting the channels, and Algeria are designed to get the ball to those two quickly once possession is won. Switzerland's wide defenders — Silvan Widmer and Ricardo Rodríguez are the projected options (verify before use) — will be tested for the full ninety.
Where Switzerland may have an edge is in the final third, where Algeria's compact defensive shape can be stretched by a side with multiple genuine attacking options. Breel Embolo as the central reference point, with Manzambi or Fabian Rieder or Dan Ndoye rotating in behind, gives Yakin combinations that are difficult to prepare for. Algeria know this is a win-or-go-home situation just as Switzerland do, and Petković's tendency to make bold adjustments could prove a strength or a liability depending on the scoreline when the second half begins.
Rayan Aït-Nouri against whoever Yakin stations on Switzerland's left side. Aït-Nouri is the single player most capable of breaking this tie open on his own — his first season at Manchester City has confirmed that the profile is as complete as it looked from the outside, and for Algeria he is the engine of the transition game. Whether that matchup is against Widmer, Rodríguez, or a tucked-in midfielder will depend on Yakin's shape on the day (verify before use), but Switzerland's left channel is the corridor Algeria will target repeatedly. If Aït-Nouri is allowed to receive and carry in space, he can convert defensive sequences into chances at a rate that will trouble any side at this tournament. Keeping him quiet — or at least making him work in tighter windows — is probably the single most important defensive task Yakin will set.
- Granit Xhaka, 144 caps, running the Switzerland build-up as he has done for fifteen years; the 33-year-old's positioning and distribution will dictate how comfortably Switzerland escape Algerian pressure
- Ibrahim Maza as Algeria's playmaker and the player most likely to find the line-breaking pass that Bentaleb or Boudaoui cannot; his Bayer Leverkusen season suggests he is ready for a stage like this
- Johan Manzambi coming off the bench if not starting, with the 20-year-old's positional flexibility giving Yakin a genuine live option to change the shape mid-match
- Riyad Mahrez, likely to be withdrawn early in the second half for Anis Hadj Moussa, meaning the captain's influence is concentrated in the first hour
- Petković's halftime adjustments, which produced the win over the Netherlands in a recent friendly and are very much part of his coaching identity
Projected lineups and selection questions are not yet verified — refresh from current team news before kickoff. (verify before use)
- Algeria are making only their second World Cup appearance since 2014, and their best finish remains the Round of 16 from that edition; a win here would equal it immediately
- Switzerland have reached the quarter-final three times in their thirteen World Cup appearances, but have not gone beyond the Round of 16 in 2022
- Luca Zidane is in Algeria's goalkeeping squad (verify before use)
- Nabil Bentaleb returns to a major tournament having missed significant time following a heart attack in 2024; Tim Sherwood noted in 2014 that both England and France had registered interest in him before his international allegiance was settled
- Manuel Akanji's rapid mental arithmetic has been documented by the Bundesliga's YouTube channel, which is either irrelevant to the result or the most Swiss footnote imaginable
- Granit Xhaka's Sunderland secured their best Premier League finish since 2001 in 2025/26, which qualifies as context for why he arrives in form
Selection notes were pre-baked June 11 and are verified day-of in the edition, not here — anything marked “verify” must be confirmed before it is load-bearing.
Odds & best bet
| Market | Selection | Odds | Implied | Ours | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total goals | Over 2.5 | +116 | 44% | 56% | +12.2% |
| Total goals | Under 2.5 | -142 | 56% | 44% | -12.2% |
| Asian handicap | Switzerland -0.5 | +105 | 47% | 54% | +7.4% |
| Asian handicap | Algeria +0.5 | -124 | 53% | 46% | -7.4% |
| To qualify | Switzerland | — | 62% | 66% | +4.5% |
| To qualify | Algeria | — | 38% | 34% | -4.5% |
Switzerland -0.5 (Asian handicap) @ +105, edge +7.4% — best price +107 (betonlineag). Flat 1u, paper record.
Logged pick: Switzerland -0.5 @ +107 (betonlineag), edge 7.4pp · open.
totals over 2.5: model-priced edge +12.2% exceeds the 8% cap for uncorroborated markets (priced from our own score matrix, no consensus cross-check) — not recorded
market snapshot Jul 2, 12:48 AM ET · DraftKings where quoted, else best of 6 US books, de-vigged multiplicatively · totals / handicap / BTTS are model-priced from the score matrix — the Opta overlay covers W/D/L only, and with no independent consensus check they clear a stricter 8% edge ceiling vs 15% for 1X2 · totals / handicap / BTTS settle on 90 minutes (regulation) — extra-time goals don't count toward them · advance edge derived from the 90' market (no quoted 'to qualify' line) — a model-vs-market read, not a recorded bet.