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Red Devils Need Control, Team Melli Bring the Chaos. Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
Read Rationale ▾
Belgium are heavy analytical favourites due to their high shot volume and superior territorial dominance. With Iran conceding twice in their opener and Belgium maintaining a high scoring output, an open, high-scoring victory for the Red Devils reflects the primary statistical trend.
Read Rationale ▾
A tight, competitive margin aligns with both teams’ opening results. Belgium have the control required to secure three points, but their defensive record combined with Iran’s high scoring rate makes a clean sheet unlikely, rendering the 2-1 margin highly logical.
Compare form, H2H, goals trends and key data for Belgium v Iran.
Belgium face Iran in Group G at World Cup 2026, with both sides chasing a first win after opening draws. Tactical preview, key trends and three punchy stats.
Belgium vs Iran — BetMGM Market Snapshot
Swipe through key markets with illustrative probabilities and sample BetMGM odds based on our match analysis.
Belgium’s massive 69% average possession share gives them a distinct structural platform to pin Iran deep into their own defensive territory.
Belgium average 18.64 shots per game, making an open, high-volume attacking display likely to generate multiple clear scoring opportunities.
With Iran scoring 13 goals in 5 games and Belgium averaging 2.5 goals, a highly competitive scoreline is strongly indicated.
Belgium scored 50 goals across their last 20 fixtures, sustaining a high-threat profile that directly challenges Iran’s recent defensive vulnerabilities.
Three Punchy Stats
- Belgium have scored 50 goals in their last 20 matches, averaging 2.5 per game, while scoring in 16 of those fixtures.
- Iran have scored 13 goals across their last five games, and they have also found the net in 17 of their last 20 matches.
- Belgium average 18.64 shots per game across 11 overall matches, with 68% of their attempts coming from inside the box.
Match Tempo: Average Goals Scored
A comparison of scoring volume over the recent form sample highlights the prominent offensive returns established by both modern frameworks.
Sustained territorial pressure has translated directly into regular high-scoring outputs across international fixtures.
Thirteen goals scored in their most recent five outings confirms a sharp, high-efficiency conversion model.
Belgium meet Iran at Los Angeles Stadium in a Group G match that already feels sharper than a second fixture has any right to feel. Both teams began their World Cup campaign with draws, both sit on one point, and both have enough attacking evidence to believe this game will not be a polite midfield seminar.
Belgium opened with a 1-1 draw against Egypt. It was not a disaster, but it was not exactly a statement either. They had to absorb the emotional irritation of falling behind before finding a way back, and that kind of result can either settle a team or leave them twitching. For a side carrying strong attacking numbers, “solid enough” will not satisfy anyone for long.
Iran, meanwhile, drew 2-2 with New Zealand. That match showed their resilience and attacking threat, but also left a defensive question hanging in the air like a clearance nobody wants to head. Team Melli can clearly hurt opponents, yet they have also conceded twice in their only World Cup game so far.
With New Zealand, Egypt, Iran and Belgium all on one point, Group G is beautifully awkward. Nobody has escaped. Nobody has collapsed. Everyone is still pretending they are calm. Lovely stuff.
Why Belgium’s attacking structure matters
Belgium’s main argument in this match is volume. Across their recent 20-game sample, they have scored 50 goals, averaging 2.5 per match. They have found the net in 16 of those 20 fixtures and have failed to score only four times. That is not just a team who can finish chances; it is a team who regularly create enough pressure to make silence almost impossible.
Their attacking profile also has depth. Belgium average 13 shots per game in the 20-game form set, with an average expected goals figure of 2.2. In the broader overall figures, their shot output climbs even higher, with 205 total shots across 11 games, an average of 18.64 per match. They also average 534.45 passes per game with 89% accuracy and 69% possession.
That tells us Belgium are not only dangerous in moments. They are built to keep the ball, move opponents around and repeatedly arrive in shooting zones. Their 68% share of shots from inside the box is especially important because it points to territory, not just hopeful distance shooting. A team can fire from 30 yards all night and look busy. Belgium’s numbers suggest something more uncomfortable for Iran: sustained access to high-value areas.
Kevin De Bruyne’s role adds another layer. He had four shots against Egypt and arrives with enough recent attacking involvement to stand out as Belgium’s most obvious individual reference point. He is not the whole machine, but he is one of the gears that makes the machine frightening. Give him space and it becomes less a football match, more a strongly worded email from midfield.
Iran’s threat is real, not decorative
It would be lazy to frame Iran as a side simply trying to survive. Their own attacking returns deserve respect. Across 20 games, Iran have scored 40 goals, scored in 17 matches and failed to score only three times. Their average of 1.9 goals per game in that period is strong, and their recent edge is even clearer: 13 goals across their last five games.
Their latest World Cup performance reinforces the point. Iran scored twice against New Zealand and have shown they can stay alive in open matches. Their last six results include a 2-2 draw with New Zealand, a 3-0 win over North Korea, a 2-2 draw with Uzbekistan and a 3-2 away win over Kyrgyzstan. There is risk in their games, but there is also bite.
Iran’s average shot count is competitive too. In their overall six-match set, they have produced 105 total shots, averaging 17.5 per game. They also have 57% possession and complete 83% of their passes, so this is not a team entirely dependent on scrambles and breakaways. Their 66% share of shots from inside the box suggests they can work attacks into threatening locations.
Still, the challenge is control. Iran have conceded seven goals across six overall matches, an average of 1.17 per game, and their World Cup concession average stands at 2.00. Against Belgium, who are predicted to reach 2.1 goals and carry a 61% probability of scoring at least twice, those defensive margins feel uncomfortably thin.
The tactical battle: Belgium pressure against Iran’s transitions
The most important tactical question is whether Iran can resist Belgium’s territorial pressure without becoming trapped too deep. Belgium’s possession and pass accuracy give them a platform to compress the pitch. Their total attacks figure is 1,329 across 11 matches, an average of 120.82, while their dangerous attacks average is 80.36. That is a lot of pressure to absorb without eventually cracking.
Iran’s numbers are lower in that department: 596 total attacks across six games, averaging 99.33, and 262 dangerous attacks, averaging 43.67. That gap suggests Belgium are more likely to spend longer stretches around the final third. But football has a wicked sense of humour. Dominating territory is useful, right up until one sloppy pass turns into an Iranian counterattack and everyone suddenly remembers defending is also part of the sport.
Iran can make this awkward by attacking early spaces and forcing Belgium’s back line to defend while retreating. Belgium have conceded in 13 of their last 20 and have conceded 22 goals in that run. They are strong defensively compared with Iran on the rating measure, with a 20% advantage, but they are not untouchable. Their recent clean-sheet count is seven in 20, while Iran’s is stronger at 10 in 20, though Belgium’s overall defensive structure is supported by better numbers in expected goals against and broader control metrics.
The absence of Z. Debast through a hamstring muscle injury may also matter in how Belgium manage defensive rhythm, although the full line-ups are not yet available. Belgium will want authority, not panic. Iran will want the match to become emotional, stretched and slightly ridiculous. Frankly, that second version sounds more fun, but Belgium would be wise to avoid it.
Group G pressure: one win changes everything
The opening draws make this match more than just a technical exercise. Iran sit on one point after scoring two and conceding two. Belgium also have one point after scoring one and conceding one. Egypt and New Zealand are in the same position, meaning the table is still level enough to make every mistake look enormous.
Belgium’s recent six-match form is unbeaten, with three wins and three draws. Their home-designated form is also strong, with four wins and two draws across the last six listed home matches. They have scored heavily in that run, including 7-0, 6-0 and 4-3 results. Iran’s last six show three wins, two draws and one defeat, so they arrive with confidence, but also with less defensive certainty away from home, having one win and one defeat across the two away matches listed.
That creates a fascinating emotional balance. Belgium are under pressure because their attacking profile says they should impose themselves. Iran are dangerous because they have enough scoring form to punish any arrogance. This is exactly the sort of match where the favourite can look comfortable for 20 minutes, concede once, and suddenly everyone starts shouting at the television like it personally betrayed them.
Prediction-focused analysis without the noise
Belgium look better equipped to control the match. Their passing volume, possession share, shot production and dangerous attack numbers all point towards a side capable of pinning Iran back and creating repeat chances. The projected scoring profile of 2.1 goals for Belgium and 0.7 for Iran also supports the idea of Belgian superiority in chance quality.
But Iran should not be written off as passive opposition. Their scoring run is too strong for that, and the 2-2 draw with New Zealand showed a team with enough attacking spirit to keep the scoreboard alive. Belgium’s task is not merely to attack; it is to attack without turning the game into a transition exchange.
A 2-1 Belgium win fits the shape of the match: Belgium with greater control and chance volume, Iran with enough cutting edge to make it uncomfortable. Not a serene evening, then. More like Belgium trying to conduct an orchestra while Iran keep throwing cymbals into the rhythm section.
🎯 Match Result & Total Goals Market
This combined market requires selecting the outright winner of the fixture alongside the total number of match goals. Combining a selection elevates the return relative to standalone outcomes but increases volatility as both variables must settle accurately.
📊 Correct Score Market
A highly specific market where the exact final scoreline at full-time must be predicted. Due to low structural probability and high situational margin, this market features enhanced pricing but carries substantial risk from single late-game events.
⚔️ Tactical Rationale & Performance Analytics
Belgium enter this fixture displaying commanding possession metrics and significant offensive production, averaging 18.64 shots and 2.5 goals per fixture. Their capacity to control territory via a 69% possession baseline ensures sustained entry into high-value zones, with 68% of their overall attempts originating from inside the penalty area. This high-volume approach matches cleanly against an Iranian defensive unit that has conceded an average of 1.17 goals across recent matches and surrendered two goals in their World Cup opener against New Zealand. While Belgium’s attacking framework remains reliable, their defence has shown vulnerability, conceding 22 goals across a 20-match stretch and keeping clean sheets in just seven of those fixtures.
📊 Tactical Indicators: Belgium Win & Over 2.5 Goals
- Belgium maintain an expected goals average of 2.2 and record 120.82 total attacks per fixture.
- Iran have surrendered two goals per game in their current World Cup campaign.
- Belgium have found the net in 16 out of their last 20 competitive outings.
Risk Factor: Transition defensive lapses if spatial control fails against direct vertical directness.
Iran possess significant counter-attacking efficiency, illustrated by 13 goals across their last five matches and a consistent 1.9 goals per game baseline. Given that Belgium’s defensive structure regularly gives up opportunities, Iran are well-positioned to find the net. However, the Red Devils’ pass accuracy and superior pressure volume should ultimately dictate the outcome. A 2-1 result reflects a match controlled predominantly by Belgium’s midfield rotation, while allowing for Iran’s proven clinical conversion on the counter. The absence of defensive depth via injury could further strain Belgian stability, confirming a tight scoreline.
🎯 Scoreline Probability Box: Belgium 2-1 Iran
Risk Factor: A completely clean sheet from Belgium or an inflation of late-stage high-event variances.
Key Tactical Mismatch
Averaging 80.36 dangerous attacks and 69% possession, establishing sustained final-third access.
Conceding an average of 2.00 goals per game in World Cup play under heavy sustained volume.
🙋 Frequently Asked Questions
⊕How does the Match Result market work?
The Match Result market requires backing a specific outcome: a home win, an away win, or a draw at full-time. It settles purely on the regular full-time result, excluding any extra time or shootouts.
⊕What does Over 2.5 Goals mean?
Over 2.5 Goals requires three or more total goals to be scored collectively by both teams during regular time. If the match concludes with two or fewer goals, the selection loses.
⊕Can I back both teams to score in this fixture?
Yes, the Both Teams to Score market allows backing both sides to find the net. Given that Iran have hit 13 goals in 5 games and Belgium average 2.5 goals scored, this represents a highly prominent option.
⊕What happens if the match finishes 1-1 in the Correct Score market?
If the match finishes 1-1, any selection backed exactly on a 2-1 scoreline will lose. Correct scoreline selections require absolute accuracy to yield a return.
⊕Is there a way to hedge against a draw outcome?
The Draw No Bet market removes the draw option entirely, refunding the initial stake if the game finishes level. This limits total risk but lowers the outright return relative to the standard win market.
⊕Why is the confidence level lower for the Correct Score prediction?
Correct Score predictions carry inherently low situational probability because football matches are highly susceptible to late structural variance. A single late goal completely changes the selection’s status.
⊕Where is this match being held?
The fixture takes place at Los Angeles Stadium during the World Cup Group G campaign. Neutral venues can subtly alter traditional performance dynamics compared to strict home or away splits.
⊕How do Belgium’s possession metrics affect the tactical layout?
Belgium’s 69% possession share allows them to squeeze the play and lock opponents inside their defensive third. This structurally creates higher shooting volumes but exposes them to rapid transitions if the ball is lost.
Last Odds Update: Jun 18, 09:26 GMT | Editorial Policy
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