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Can Equatorial Guinea disrupt Algeria’s perfect Group E record in Rabat? Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
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Both teams share significant defensive weaknesses, specifically in defending set pieces and wide attacks. Leicester’s tendency for individual errors and fouling in dangerous areas provides a clear path for Cheltenham to score, especially given the home side’s strength in direct free kicks. Conversely, Leicester’s offensive quality and high finishing rate should see them exploit a Cheltenham defense that has conceded 51 goals this season. The combination of these factors points toward an open game where neither keeper is likely to remain untested.
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A 2-1 scoreline aligns with the expectation that both teams will find the back of the net while acknowledging Leicester's superior squad depth and clinical finishing. Leicester averages 1.44 goals per game and is playing against a side two divisions lower, suggesting they will find the winner. However, their defensive record of 40 goals conceded in 27 games, paired with Cheltenham’s home momentum and set-piece threat, suggests the League Two side will at least claim a goal of their own.
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Equatorial Guinea vs Algeria Predictions and Best Bets
Equatorial Guinea vs Algeria — William Hill Market Snapshot
Pricing shown below based on tournament form and recent defensive consistency.
Algeria’s perfect record and technical dominance place them in a commanding position according to current market pricing.
Defensive reliability for Algeria suggests low-conceding outcomes are the primary expectation.
- Algeria’s Group E start has been ruthless: six points from two matches, four goals scored and zero conceded, setting up a finale built on control and clean-sheet confidence.
- Equatorial Guinea have fired 10 shots per game in the tournament yet sit on zero points after two defeats, showing effort in attack without the results to match it.
- The possession and passing gap hints at game rhythm: Algeria have 53.8% possession and 85.9% pass completion, while Equatorial Guinea sit at 49.5% and 79.5%.
Technical Efficiency: Pass Completion Rate
High completion rates often correlate with a team’s ability to dictate tempo and maintain territorial control.
A high level of precision has allowed them to control both matches played so far.
A slightly lower rate suggests a more vertical or contested approach in possession.
Defensive Profile: Goals Conceded Per Match
Long-term averages reflect the consistent defensive organisation of both nations over recent samples.
They have maintained zero goals against so far in the current group stage.
They have conceded three goals across their first two tournament fixtures.
Equatorial Guinea finish their Group E campaign against the group leaders, Algeria, on Wednesday at the Moulay Hassan Stadium in Rabat, Morocco. Same stadium, same night, but very different moods travelling into it.
Algeria arrive with six points from two games and four goals scored without conceding, already assured of a place in the round of 16. Two wins, a clean sheet in each, and the table says they’ve earned the right to approach this finale with a bit of control and a bit of calm.
For Equatorial Guinea, it’s the opposite: two matches played, two defeats, one goal scored and three conceded. The maths of qualification is tight enough that they need a positive result and a helpful nudge from elsewhere. It’s not quite “backs to the wall” yet — but it’s close. And when the opposition are coming off a 3–0 win over Sudan followed by a 1–0 over Burkina Faso, the margin for error can feel like it’s drawn with a razor.
The intriguing part is that this fixture has already had a habit of being awkward. There’s a recent 0–0 between them, there’s an Algeria win, and there’s also an Equatorial Guinea win. So while the group positions look lopsided, the actual match-up has shown it can bend in different directions, depending on who lands the first punch — or who avoids throwing a careless one.
Team News and Likely Set-Ups
Equatorial Guinea’s possible XI is listed as: Owono; Akapo, Orozco, Coco, Anieboh; Mascarell, Ganet, Machín; Salvador, Miranda, Nsue.
On paper, that reads like a back four with Akapo and Anieboh as the full-backs, Orozco and Coco in the middle, and a three-man midfield featuring Mascarell, Ganet and Machín. With Salvador, Miranda and Nsue ahead of them, it hints at a front three shape that can become either narrow and compact or wide and direct depending on how aggressively the wide players carry the ball.
Algeria’s possible XI is listed as: Mandrea; Belghali, Mandi, Bensebaini, Aït-Nouri; Zerrouki, Boulbina, Chaïbi; Moussa, Amoura.
That suggests a back four with Mandi and Bensebaini as central options and Aït-Nouri providing thrust from the left. The midfield names point towards a technical core, and the forward line features Amoura, who already has an assist in the tournament. Algeria’s tournament shape has been shown as a 4-2-3-1, with four scored and none conceded across two matches — a neat summary of balance: enough cutting edge to win, enough discipline to keep control.
The selection tension sits in the middle of the pitch. Equatorial Guinea’s likely midfield trio looks built to compete and connect. Algeria’s likely set-up reads like one designed to circulate possession, step into attacking zones with runners, and feed creators who can decide matches quickly.
How the Match Could Be Played
If you start with the stakes, you start with tempo. Algeria don’t need chaos; Equatorial Guinea probably do.
Expect Equatorial Guinea to think first about stability: shorten the distances between lines, protect the centre, and make Algeria play around rather than through. With Akapo and Anieboh either side of Orozco and Coco, a compact back four can invite Algeria into wide areas — particularly if the wide attackers track back to help. That could set up repeated patterns: Algeria building down the flanks, Equatorial Guinea trying to lock the ball near the touchline, and then springing out when the first pass into midfield is loose.
The question is how brave Equatorial Guinea feel with the ball. With Machín in that midfield group and Salvador, Miranda and Nsue ahead, there’s a clear route into quicker attacks: win it, move it early, and ask questions of Algeria’s back line before it’s set. Nsue’s presence can change the feel of a transition, because he’s listed as a forward option and has been used in the tournament. If Equatorial Guinea can get him involved in the first two passes after regaining possession, they can force Algeria’s defenders to turn — and turning defenders is often the quickest way to make a match feel uncomfortable.
For Algeria, the match plan almost writes itself from their numbers and their structure. A 4-2-3-1 can create a stable base for circulation: two deeper midfielders to recycle, full-backs to provide width, and advanced players to arrive between the lines. Aït-Nouri from left-back stands out as a natural source of progression, and Bensebaini alongside Mandi gives a platform that has already delivered two clean sheets in the group.
The most interesting tactical battle could be Algeria’s ability to pull Equatorial Guinea’s midfield out of shape. If Equatorial Guinea step up to press, Algeria have the pass completion in this tournament to play through it. If Equatorial Guinea sit off, Algeria have shown enough shot volume and enough attacking output to keep squeezing the game until the opening appears. Either way, Algeria are likely to try to keep the match in a rhythm that suits them: long spells of possession, controlled rest-defence behind the ball, and quick accelerations around the box rather than end-to-end mayhem.
Where Equatorial Guinea can hurt them is in the moments that don’t look like much — second balls, loose clearances, a winger receiving with space to face forward. If the game becomes a sequence of short bursts rather than one long Algerian possession drill, Equatorial Guinea give themselves a fighting chance to turn the contest into a set of mini-battles.
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The Numbers That Support the Story
Algeria’s group stage has been defined by efficiency at both ends: two matches, two wins, four goals scored and none conceded. That matters tactically because it suggests they’ve been able to commit enough bodies forward to create chances, while still protecting themselves in transition — the exact balance you want in a match where the opponent may gamble for a result.
Their control is also visible in the ball metrics: 53.8% possession and 85.9% pass completion in the tournament. That combination usually points to a side that can progress play without forcing it, and it supports the expectation of Algeria trying to manage the match through the middle third, patiently moving Equatorial Guinea until a lane opens.
Equatorial Guinea’s tournament line is harsher: two matches, one goal scored, 10 shots per game, and 49.5% possession with 79.5% pass completion. The shot volume tells you they’re not completely passive — they are getting attempts away — but the results (two defeats) suggest that either the shot quality hasn’t matched the quantity, or the key moments have gone against them.
Zooming out, the wider match set also points to how each side can approach game states. In a larger sample, Algeria average 2 goals scored per game and 0.64 conceded per game across 28 played games, while Equatorial Guinea average 1.21 scored and 1.11 conceded across 19 played games. You don’t need to turn that into prophecy; you simply note what it implies: Algeria tend to generate more and allow less, which often translates into territorial control and fewer defensive emergencies.
There’s also a set-piece and territory hint in the “corners” line: Equatorial Guinea have 73 corners in 19 games (3.84 per game), while Algeria have 163 in 28 (5.82 per game). If Algeria can pin Equatorial Guinea back for long stretches, those repeated wide attacks can stack up into corners and second-phase pressure — exactly the kind of “slow squeeze” that breaks tight games.
Key “Moments” to Watch
One moment is the obvious one: what happens when Algeria’s wide build-up meets Equatorial Guinea’s defensive line. If Aït-Nouri can step on and deliver from the left while Algeria’s attackers occupy the box, Equatorial Guinea’s full-backs will have to decide whether to engage early or protect space behind them. Get that decision wrong twice and you end up defending inside your own six-yard box for long spells. Get it right and you can force Algeria into sideways passes that drain tempo.
Another moment sits in the middle. Equatorial Guinea’s midfield — Mascarell, Ganet and Machín — looks like it can be the engine room for staying competitive. If they can win duels, slow Algeria’s rhythm, and then find the first forward pass into Salvador, Miranda or Nsue, you start to create the kind of transition threat that changes an opponent’s risk appetite. Even a team that’s comfortable can become cautious if it feels one turnover might turn into a sprint back towards its own goal.
Then there’s finishing and decision-making in tight areas. Algeria’s top tournament scorer is Riyad Mahrez with three goals. That matters because it points to a player capable of turning control into a scoreboard edge. Equatorial Guinea, meanwhile, have had one tournament scorer so far: Marvin Anieboh with one goal. In a match where one side needs a result, you watch who takes responsibility in the decisive moments — the shot from the edge, the run to the near post, the calm pass instead of the rushed one.
What could go wrong with this read? Plenty. A group finale can flip quickly: an early goal changes risk levels, a single lapse can undo an otherwise organised shape, and a match that looks set up for control can suddenly become frantic if the chasing side lands the first blow. And given this fixture has recently produced both a goalless draw and a surprise win, it would be brave to assume it follows a single, tidy script.
Best Bet for Equatorial Guinea vs Algeria
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Algeria to win
Algeria enters the final group stage fixture as the dominant force in Group E, having secured six points from their opening two matches. Their performance has been characterized by defensive resilience and clinical attacking, scoring four goals while maintaining a perfect defensive record with zero goals conceded. This level of control is reflected in their technical superiority, as they have averaged 53.8% possession and an impressive 85.9% pass completion rate throughout the tournament. By contrast, Equatorial Guinea has struggled significantly, suffering two defeats and managing only a single goal. Their path to this match has been defined by narrow losses and an inability to convert possession into results, despite averaging 10 shots per game.
The tactical setup favors the visitors, who utilize a balanced 4-2-3-1 formation that provides stability in transition and multiple creative outlets. While the opposition has the capacity to be compact, Algeria’s ability to circulate the ball and exploit wide areas through runners makes them difficult to contain for ninety minutes. Furthermore, historical averages over a larger sample of 28 matches show the Algerians scoring 2 goals per game while conceding just 0.64. In comparison, Equatorial Guinea averages 1.21 scored and 1.11 conceded over 19 games. This statistical gap highlights a consistent difference in efficiency at both ends of the pitch.
The current momentum is firmly with the group leaders, who have already matched their combined goal tally from the previous two tournaments in just two games. While the hosts need a result to keep their slim qualification hopes alive, the sheer consistency of the Algerian backline—led by the likes of Bensebaini and Mandi—suggests they will be able to weather any early pressure. Given the current form where one side is perfect and the other is winless, the most logical outcome is for the superior technical side to dictate the tempo and secure a third consecutive victory.
What could go wrong
The primary risk to this selection is the possibility of the favorites rotating their squad heavily, having already secured progression to the round of 16. If they lack their usual intensity, a highly motivated Equatorial Guinea side—fighting for survival—could capitalize on a lapse in concentration. Historical head-to-head results also show this fixture can be unpredictable, including a previous 0-0 draw and an upset win for the Nzalang Nacional in 2022.
Correct score lean
Algeria to win 2-0
Rationale
A 2-0 victory for the visitors aligns with their current tournament trend of defensive perfection and steady scoring output. Having won their opener 3-0 and their second match 1-0, they have demonstrated they do not need to overextend themselves to secure results. Their defensive unit has yet to be breached in this campaign, while Equatorial Guinea has struggled for goals, finding the net only once in 180 minutes of play. Algeria’s average of two goals per game over a 28-match span further supports the likelihood of them striking twice against a side that has conceded three times in two matches.
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