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Saturday night in Florida carries a curious tension. Here’s our Bet Builder pick for England vs New Zealand, which has been placed with Bet365:
Jude Bellingham Over 1 Shot
Shots on Target
Bellingham has fired in 51 shots across 22 LaLiga starts this season, averaging 2.3 per start with 26 on target. He attacks from deep, shoots from inside and outside the box, and registers efforts in almost every outing. Against a New Zealand side likely camped in its own half, England's 60.5% possession should hand him repeated chances to shoot, comfortably clearing the two-effort line.
Harry Kane Over 1.5 Shots on Target
Shots on Target
Kane has hit the target 67 times from 119 Bundesliga attempts, a 56% rate worth roughly 2.5 on-target efforts per 90. With 18 big chances created and 175 box touches, his volume is relentless. Against a New Zealand defence that conceded four to Haiti, two on-target attempts sits well within his established output this season.
Harry Kane to Score
To Score Anytime
Sixty-six goals for club and country, including those back-to-back hat-tricks, tell you everything about Kane's current form. He finishes from open play, set-pieces and penalties, offering threat from every angle. Facing a depleted New Zealand side that has blanked in three of six, a striker priced around 1/2 to score looks the natural anchor of this build.
Under 3.5 Total Goals
Total Goals
England have kept a clean sheet in all 11 of their wins under Tuchel, prioritising control over chaos. New Zealand have failed to score in half of their last six and arrive missing midfielders. With England's creative absentees rested, a methodical 2-0 or 3-0 win is the likeliest shape, slotting under this line.
New Zealand Over 2.5 Fouls Committed
Fouls Committed
Short of central control after midfield injuries, New Zealand will defend deep and disrupt rather than dictate. England's runners and Kane's hold-up play will draw late challenges and free-kicks. For a side spending most of the night chasing possession, three or more fouls is a low bar to clear.
England meet New Zealand at the Raymond James Stadium in Tampa Bay, kick-off 9pm BST and live on ITV1 from 8.15pm, in a World Cup warm-up that sits awkwardly between relaxed exhibition and genuine examination. Thomas Tuchel is managing minutes, weighing fitness and handing opportunities to fringe names while protecting the players who matter most. New Zealand, meanwhile, arrive chasing a response after a chastening start to their own pre-tournament programme. There is more riding on this than the friendly label suggests, and our five-leg Bet Builder at 53/1 leans firmly into the numbers from both camps.
England vs New Zealand Bet Builder Tip
Leg 1: Jude Bellingham Over 1 Shot
The argument for Bellingham firing in at least two efforts rests on a pattern he has repeated all season rather than a hopeful hunch. Across 22 LaLiga starts for Real Madrid in 2025/26, he has attempted 51 shots, which works out at roughly 2.3 per start. That is not the profile of a midfielder who drifts to the edges of contests; it is the output of a player who continually arrives in dangerous positions and pulls the trigger when he gets there. Six of those efforts have ended up in the net, and a healthy 26 of his 51 attempts have been on target, a 51% accuracy rate that tells you he is not simply spraying speculative shots into the stands.
His shot map underlines how varied his threat is. He takes 33 of his attempts from inside the box and 18 from distance, mixing close-range finishes with strikes from outside the area. He has scored from regular play, from set-pieces and from corners, and nine of his efforts have been headers. That breadth matters because it means he does not rely on one single avenue to register a shot. Whether play is patient and methodical or quick and chaotic, Bellingham finds a way to get his foot or his head onto the ball in a shooting position.
The England context only sharpens the case. Tuchel’s side average 60.5% possession and eight shots per 90 minutes, so they control territory and funnel opponents back towards their own goal for long spells. That is precisely the environment in which an attacking midfielder of Bellingham’s energy thrives. When a team sits deep and defends in numbers, the space opens up in front of the box rather than behind it, and that is exactly the zone Bellingham loves to attack with late runs and arriving strikes.
New Zealand are likely to spend much of the night doing exactly that. They have failed to find the net in three of their last six matches, their midfield has been thinned by injuries, and they were beaten 4-0 by Haiti in their opening pre-tournament friendly. A side struggling that badly to keep the ball will be camped in its own half, which hands England’s runners repeated invitations to shoot. Bellingham, with his 106 touches in the opposition box this season and his habit of breaking forward from deeper areas, is built to take advantage of that kind of game state.
The over 1 shot line simply asks for two or more attempts across 90 minutes. His season average comfortably clears that bar, and a friendly setting, where players are encouraged to express themselves and stake a claim, tends to nudge an ambitious midfielder towards more shots rather than fewer. The floor here looks reassuringly high; the ceiling is considerably higher still.
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Leg 2: Harry Kane Over 1.5 Shots on Target
Kane’s shooting volume this season makes the over 1.5 shots on target line look like sensible pricing rather than a stretch. He has racked up 119 attempts in the Bundesliga, of which 67 have hit the target, a 56% on-target rate that is frankly absurd for a striker taking that many shots. Spread across his 2,382 league minutes, that comes out at around 2.5 shots on target per 90, which sits clearly above the two-effort threshold this leg requires.
The quality behind the quantity is just as striking. He has created 40 chances and carved out 18 big chances, while registering 175 touches in the opposition box. He shoots from everywhere worth shooting from, with 95 of his attempts arriving inside the area and 15 of them coming via headers. He ended the league season with hat-tricks in successive games, the sort of finishing run that does not happen by accident and which speaks to a player operating at the very peak of his powers.
Against New Zealand, who shipped four goals without reply to Haiti and whose midfield has been hollowed out by absences, Kane will get sight of goal in central areas. His ability to drop between the lines, link the play and then peel away for late arrivals means his attempts come from sustained involvement rather than the occasional half-chance. Two efforts on target for a striker averaging two and a half per 90 against a defence already shown to be vulnerable is a measured expectation, not an optimistic one.
Leg 3: Harry Kane to Score
Sixty-six goals for club and country in a single campaign is the kind of number that stops feeling real the longer you stare at it. Kane has reached it through relentless consistency: 61 for Bayern Munich across all competitions and five for England, capped by those back-to-back hat-tricks to round off the Bundesliga season. This is a striker whose output does not taper as the games pile up; if anything, it intensifies.
For England, his importance is impossible to overstate. He offers a focal point who can hold the ball under pressure, drag defenders out of shape and finish with either foot or his head. Across the Bundesliga he has scored from regular play, from corners, from penalties, from fast breaks and from free-kicks, so there is no single way to keep him quiet. New Zealand, having failed to score in half of their last six fixtures and having just conceded four in one match, are not equipped to handle that range of threat for a full 90 minutes.
The anytime scorer market is priced at around 1/2, reflecting how heavily the odds favour him finding the net. This leg acts as the steadying anchor of the Bet Builder, providing a foundation of attacking probability that the higher-variance picks can be layered on top of. Against a depleted, low-confidence defence, a striker in this kind of form should make his presence felt.
Leg 4: Under 3.5 Total Goals
England’s defensive record under Tuchel is the spine of this selection. In 14 matches since he took charge they have won 11, and every single one of those victories arrived with a clean sheet. Not most of them, all of them. That is no fluke; it reflects a deliberate approach built on control, compactness and an unwillingness to let games descend into chaos. England keep the ball, smother transitions and protect their structure even while rotating the side.
Under 3.5 goals asks for three or fewer across both teams. With New Zealand having drawn a blank in three of their last six outings, and arriving without two key midfielders, the prospect of a wide-open, goal-laden contest looks slim. The All Whites will be defending for long periods, and even Chris Wood’s fitness, welcome as it is for them, gives them a single aerial outlet rather than a balanced attacking platform.
England’s own situation points the same way. With Saka, Eze, Madueke and Rice all rested after the Champions League final, their most creative options are absent, and younger camp additions will be feeding in. That tends to produce more methodical, less explosive forward play. The most likely scorelines hover around 2-0, 3-0 and 1-0, all of which slot neatly under this line. England’s blend of 60.5% possession and eight shots per 90 points to territorial dominance rather than a frantic shootout. A controlled, low-event win matches almost everything Tuchel’s England have produced.
Leg 5: New Zealand Over 2.5 Fouls Committed
New Zealand face a night of sustained defensive graft, and that is the heart of this leg. With Ryan Thomas ruled out through a hamstring injury and Joe Bell only a doubtful returner after a calf problem, the All Whites are short of the central control needed to keep the ball and relieve pressure. When a team cannot pass its way out of trouble, it ends up disrupting instead, and disruption tends to arrive in the form of fouls.
England’s attacking pattern feeds directly into that. Their movement through the lines, Kane dropping into pockets, and midfield runners arriving late will all pull New Zealand’s defenders into awkward decisions. Tracking runs they cannot quite reach, sliding in to halt counter-pressing England moves and wrestling with Kane’s hold-up play are the moments that produce free-kicks. A side defending deep and for long stretches against one of the tournament favourites racks up fouls almost by default, simply through being a fraction late to challenges.
The over 2.5 line means three or more New Zealand fouls across the match. For a team likely to spend the bulk of the evening chasing the ball and breaking up England’s possession, that is an undemanding threshold, and the personnel picture tilts it further in that direction.
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