Friday, July 10, 2026 — SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, California
For the first time in six years, Belgium’s golden generation has reached a World Cup quarterfinal, while Spain returns to the same stage after their 2018 heartbreak. The stakes are clear: a semifinal berth on Friday at SoFi Stadium. What makes this matchup so compelling for bettors is the contrast between Spain’s flawless defensive record and Belgium’s knockout-stage explosion, including their 4-1 demolition of the United States. For Canadian bettors trying to decide whether, how, or even if they should get involved, here is the complete breakdown.
Who Should Read This Guide?
This isn’t a “lock of the century” pitch. It’s designed for different types of bettors, and understanding your own style is essential before placing any wager:
- The cautious favorite-backer: Wants exposure to Spain without overpaying. Prefers using a handicap line instead of a straight moneyline.
- The low-scoring specialist: Noticed Spain hasn’t conceded a goal in five matches and wants to build a bet around that trend rather than the match winner.
- The prop and parlay player: More interested in stacking same-game combinations—scorer, card, result—for bigger payouts on smaller stakes.
- The underdog/value bettor: Knows Belgium has Kevin De Bruyne and a knockout win over the U.S. in the bank. Wants a live long shot rather than backing the chalk.
- The first-time World Cup bettor: Needs help understanding what these bet types mean before deciding where to put their money.
If you don’t fit into any of these, that’s fine too. The point of laying it out this way is that “who should bet this game” depends entirely on your risk tolerance—not on a single “right” pick.
How Spain and Belgium Reached This Stage
Spain has been unbeatable through the group stage and knockout rounds, anchored by a defense that analysts call the best in the tournament. Reports indicate Spain is conceding at a rate of roughly 0.05 expected goals per shot faced, with only a handful of shots on target allowed across their first five matches. Spain has not conceded a single goal in this tournament, and no team has beaten Unai Simon yet.
Belgium, meanwhile, entered with two draws against Egypt and Iran, then exploded with 12 goals in their last three matches, including the 4-1 win over the U.S. Kevin De Bruyne remains capable of unlocking a low block from deep positions. However, Belgium is dealing with a significant absence in midfield: Amadou Onana is reportedly out with a long-term ACL injury, which several previews describe as a real blow to Belgium’s ability to press and control central areas against Spain’s possession game. Zeno Debast’s fitness has also been in question, while Spain has its own knock to watch in winger Nico Williams.
Historically, Spain dominates Belgium. Spain has won five straight against Belgium dating back to 2004, including previous World Cup meetings. Over 100 years of history, Spain is 12-5-5 against Belgium.
What the Consensus Says About the Score
There is no single “official” score here, but pulling from multiple previews, the consensus shape is fairly consistent:
- Most likely outcome: A narrow Spain win, with previews leaning toward 1-0 or 2-0 rather than a blowout. One outlet explicitly called it Spain 2-0.
- Total goals: Several previews lean toward Under 2.5 goals, built almost entirely around Spain’s defensive record rather than an expectation that Belgium can’t score at all.
- Clean sheet angle: More than one preview highlights Spain’s streak of consecutive clean sheets as the single biggest data point. That’s the trend most “under” and “Spain to win to nil” bets are hanging on.
- Handicap view: Coverage citing a Spain -1 Asian handicap price suggests the market expects Spain to win by more than a single goal often enough to make that line roughly a coin flip.
Treat all of that as a synthesis of public analysis, not a guarantee. Nobody has a verified crystal ball for a knockout match between two well-matched federations, and Belgium has already shown in this tournament it can produce a result nobody expected.
Understanding the Odds for Canadian Bettors
Canadian sportsbooks typically offer a choice of odds format (decimal, American, or fractional) in your account settings. Decimal is the default in most of the market and the easiest for quick math. Lines were moving in the run-up to kickoff and will keep moving, so treat the following as a snapshot:
For the match winner (90 minutes) in American format, Spain is priced between -154 and -165, the draw ranges from +290 to +300, and Belgium sits between +425 and +480. In decimal form, Spain is approximately 1.61–1.67, the draw is around 3.90–4.17, and Belgium is roughly 5.25–5.88. To advance (including extra time and penalties), Spain is -340 (about 1.29 decimal) while Belgium is +260 (about 3.60 decimal).
On total goals, the over 2.5 is priced between -117 and -125, while the under 2.5 sits between +100 and +102. Spain to win to nil is priced at +175, which some analysts call the best-priced bet on the card because it captures Spain’s historically strong defensive record.
For same-game props, Mikel Oyarzabal to score anytime is around +120 (~2.20 decimal), and Lamine Yamal anytime scorer is roughly -120 (~1.83 decimal). One widely cited bet builder—Spain to win in 90 minutes, Oyarzabal to score, and Nicolas Raskin to be carded—was priced at roughly 6/1 (about 7.00 decimal).
Always confirm live odds in your own sportsbook before betting—these numbers came from previews published in the days before kickoff and will have shifted significantly, especially once starting lineups are confirmed.
Matching the Bet to Your Betting Style
If you are a cautious favorite-backer, a straight Spain moneyline pays little given how short the price is. Instead, consider an Asian handicap (Spain -1) or a draw no bet on Spain to get better value while still backing the favorite.
For the low-scoring specialist, Under 2.5 total goals is the bet most previews converge on, built directly around Spain’s tournament-long defensive numbers. Combining it with “Spain to win and both teams not to score” is a more specific version of the same read.
If you are a prop/parlay player, anytime goalscorer markets (Oyarzabal, Yamal) and same-game bet builders let you express a view on how the game plays out, not just who wins. This is useful if you think Spain wins but want a bigger multiplier than the straight moneyline offers.
For the underdog/value bettor, Belgium moneyline or Belgium/Draw double chance is the highest-variance route. You’re betting that De Bruyne creates enough against a defense that hasn’t been breached yet, banking on the same unpredictability that beat the U.S.
If you are a first-time bettor, start simple. A small stake on the match-winner market or a total-goals over/under is easier to track and understand than a multi-leg bet builder, even if the payout is smaller.
Important Betting Notes for Canadian Players
- Age limits vary by province: The legal minimum is 18 in Alberta, Manitoba, and Quebec, and 19 in Ontario, British Columbia, and most other provinces.
- This is entertainment, not an investment: Nothing above is a guaranteed outcome. It’s a synthesis of public previews and market pricing, and knockout football has a well-earned reputation for humbling favorites.
- Bet what you can afford to lose: Set a limit before kickoff rather than during it, and treat in-play chasing as the fastest way to turn a bad beat into a worse one.
- If gambling stops being fun: Free, confidential support is available across Canada. ConnexOntario (1-866-531-2600) for Ontario residents, GameSense through BCLC in British Columbia, Jeu: aide in Quebec, and equivalent provincial programs elsewhere.
Whatever side of this one you land on, it’s shaping up to be one of the most tactically interesting quarterfinals of the tournament. Rodri’s control of midfield against De Bruyne’s ability to break lines from deep is a genuine chess match, independent of what you’ve got riding on it.
Odds and predictions referenced above reflect previews published in the days before the July 10, 2026 kickoff and are for informational purposes only. Not financial advice—gamble responsibly.


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