Loading...
The second quarter-final sends Spain against Belgium in Los Angeles on 10 July, and history and form both point one way. Spain arrive as the tournament’s meanest defence — two goals conceded in the whole campaign, four straight clean sheets — and have never lost to Belgium in seven meetings. Belgium have goals in them but leak at the back and are without the injured Amadou Onana. Spain are 1.61 to win the 90 minutes; this is the data case.

The Numbers That Matter
| Metric | Spain | Belgium |
|---|---|---|
| Win odds (90 min) | 1.61 | 5.25 |
| Outright (Winner) | 4.70 | 31.0 |
| Tournament record | 4 wins, 1 draw | 3 wins, 3 draws (unbeaten) |
| Last 16 | 1-0 v Portugal | 4-1 v USA |
| Goals for / against | 9 / 2 | 17 / 5 |
Odds (aggregated decimals) and match data as of 8 July 2026. The draw is 4.00; one book has priced Belgium longer, around 5.80 — treat the visitors’ price as a range. A level score after 90 goes to extra time and, if needed, penalties.
Why Spain Are Favourites
Spain’s case is the simplest of the round: control and a defence nobody has solved. They have conceded twice all tournament, kept four clean sheets in a row, and edged Portugal 1-0 in an all-Iberian last-16 tie. The head-to-head is emphatic — seven meetings, six Spanish wins and a draw, a 16-3 goal aggregate, and Belgium have never won. That combination is why Spain are 1.61 on the night and a 4.70 outright shot, comfortably shorter than Belgium’s 31.0.
Belgium’s Route to an Upset
Belgium are unbeaten and can score — 17 goals in the tournament, and a statement 4-1 dismissal of co-hosts USA in the last 16 — but three of their five matches were draws, and they have conceded five. The bigger blow is at the back: midfield anchor Amadou Onana is out for the tournament with a ruptured ACL, thinning the shield in front of a defence that has already shown cracks. Against the most miserly attack-suppressing side left, that is a difficult profile.
Conditions and Context
The tie is at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, a fixed-roof venue with a sheltered pitch, so the Los Angeles heat is not a factor — expect a controlled, technical environment, which suits the more possession-based side. On the evidence of the tournament, that is Spain. Spain’s one wobble was a 0-0 with Cape Verde in the group; winger Nico Williams is a doubt with an adductor strain but is expected in the matchday squad.
The Verdict
Cold read: Spain at 1.61 is well founded — the best defence in the tournament, an unbroken head-to-head record, and a neutral indoor setting that favours their control. The value angle is not the favourite but the goals market: Spain’s low-scoring, clean-sheet profile (nine goals for, two against) points to a tight, low-total game rather than a Belgian shootout, even with Belgium’s attacking numbers. Belgium at 5.25 carry some upset equity through their front line, but without Onana and against this defence, a small stake on the outsider or the draw (4.00) is the more interesting play than backing a short favourite.
For the full bracket, see the quarter-final preview; for how both sides got here, the round-of-16 results recap. More on the Red Devils on the Belgium team page, the venue on the SoFi Stadium guide, and the wider market in the evergreen betting guide.
- Spain (1.61) are strong favourites: two goals conceded all tournament, four straight clean sheets, and unbeaten in seven against Belgium.
- Belgium (5.25) are unbeaten and beat the USA 4-1, but drew three group games, have conceded five, and are without the injured Amadou Onana (ACL).
- The head-to-head is 6-0-1 to Spain across seven meetings (16-3 goals) — Belgium have never won.
- SoFi Stadium’s fixed roof removes the LA heat, favouring Spain’s control; the draw is 4.00.
- Kick-off is Saturday 7:00 AM NZST; the low-scoring, clean-sheet profile points to a tight total.
Odds shown are aggregated decimals as of 8 July 2026 and are for analysis only. Betting carries risk — stake only what you can afford to lose. For New Zealand support, see Responsible Gambling.