World Cup semi-finals between elite, well-matched sides nearly always start conservatively. Coaches know that one mistake can end a tournament run. The market, however, is pricing a four-plus goal game at a combined 30% — that is too high for a match between two teams whose knockout form screams defence first.
Defensive records that kill the high-scoring narrative
France have not conceded a single goal in their last three knockout matches. They shut out Morocco, Paraguay and Sweden, and their last goal against in any match was Norway’s consolation in the group stage. Spain have conceded only once in their last four knockout games — and that goal came from a Belgium cross that beat Cubarsí in the air, not from sustained open play.
Both sides have demonstrated that they can keep clean sheets under tournament pressure. France’s defensive record is especially strong with Tchouaméni back in midfield, screening the back four and breaking up opposition transitions. Spain, for their part, have only been breached once in four knockout ties — and that was from a set-piece type situation, not through being carved open.
Midfield screening and tactical caution
Deschamps is expected to start Tchouaméni alongside Rabiot, giving France a physical, athletic midfield that can cover ground and protect the centre. De la Fuente, meanwhile, is likely to keep Fabián Ruiz in the XI over Pedri — a selection that adds physical presence and arrival power rather than pure control. Neither coach is sending out a gung-ho line-up. Both have stressed the need for defensive solidity in their pre-match comments.
The presence of two disciplined midfield screens — Tchouaméni-Rabiot versus Rodri-Fabián — means there will be little space between the lines. Creative players like Mbappé, Lamine Yamal and Dani Olmo will find themselves operating in tighter areas, reducing the chance of quick-fire multiple goals.
Game state and semi-final pressure
This is a semi-final, not a group-stage dead rubber. The winner goes to the final; the loser plays a third-place match that nobody wants. The natural instinct for both managers is to ensure they are not eliminated in the first 30 minutes. That conservative mindset typically suppresses goal volume in the opening hour, and even when teams push later, the total rarely exceeds three.
History supports this: the last three World Cup semi-finals involving one of these sides — France 2018, France 2022, Spain 2010 — all finished with exactly one goal or fewer in regulation. Goals come at a premium at this stage.
The bookmaker’s overreaction to attacking talent
The market is clearly looking at France’s front four — Mbappé, Dembélé, Olise, Doué — and Spain’s talented forwards — Lamine Yamal, Dani Olmo, Oyarzabal — and assuming an open, entertaining game. But the same attacking talent has not produced high-scoring knockout games in this tournament: France’s knockout matches have produced 2, 1 and 2 goals; Spain’s have produced 3, 1 and 2. Not a single one hit four or more.
The edge here is simple: the implied probability of over 3.5 goals is too high given the actual data. Both teams defend well, both coaches will prioritise not losing, and the semi-final stage historically suppresses totals. Under 3.5 is the correct call.




