Expert insight: Spain’s title credentials will be tested in the June 26 decider against Uruguay in Guadalajara. All eyes on the second-place race.
ATS.io expert verdicts
The sharp edge
Early money is gravitating toward Uruguay to win the group outright at +370. The market is pricing Spain to rotate for their third match against Uruguay, which would give Bielsa’s side a real shot at first place. If that rotation happens, Uruguay’s transitional speed and Valverde’s ability to produce big moments at big times makes them legitimately dangerous at that number. The Saudi Arabia first-half team goal total in their opener against Uruguay is worth targeting under given the chaos of a new manager taking charge less than two months before the tournament.
Key fixture: Uruguay vs Spain (June 26, Guadalajara) is the only Group H match outside the United States and could decide the final standings
Projected standings
Green = projected to advance. Amber = third-place wildcard possible in the expanded format.
Group analysis
Group H is arguably the most lopsided group at the 2026 World Cup in terms of the gap between first and the rest, yet it is also one of the most compelling to watch. Spain arrive as Euro 2024 champions, ranked 2nd in the world and widely regarded as the tournament’s most complete team. Their presence in this group guarantees that every other team faces at least one encounter against a genuine world-class side. The real story of Group H is what happens behind Spain and whether Uruguay, Saudi Arabia, or Cape Verde can seize second place.
Spain enter under Luis de la Fuente with a settled squad, the reigning European crown, and a generation of talent that has been building since the breakthrough Euro 2024 victory over England in the final. Lamine Yamal will make his World Cup debut having already turned 18 before the tournament opens. Rodri’s return from injury gives De la Fuente the midfield engine he needed, and Mikel Oyarzabal’s form for Real Sociedad has made him the undisputed first-choice centre-forward. Spain’s 21-goal haul in 6 qualifying games, conceding just twice, underlines a team operating at the peak of its powers. Their eyes are firmly on the title, not the group.
Uruguay are the most intriguing team in the group and arguably at the entire tournament. Marcelo Bielsa’s appointment in 2023 brought a radical intensity that has produced brilliant results, including wins over Brazil and Argentina in qualifying, but also alarming collapses, a 5-1 thrashing by the United States in November and a run of four matches without a win. The talent is not in doubt. Federico Valverde at Real Madrid is one of Europe’s most complete midfielders, Ronald Araujo provides world-class defensive quality, and Darwin Nunez at Al-Hilal gives Uruguay a centre-forward capable of scaring any defence. The question is whether Bielsa’s system holds together under tournament pressure.
Saudi Arabia arrive in extraordinary circumstances. Herve Renard, the architect of their famous 2-1 win over Argentina in 2022, was sacked on April 17, less than two months before their first game. The replacement, Georgios Donis, inherits a squad made up largely of Saudi Pro League players, led by Salem Al-Dawsari and built around a high-pressing 4-3-3 that can be spectacular and fragile in equal measure. A managerial change of this magnitude, this close to a tournament, is a significant destabilising force. Their best hope is the June 26 match against Cape Verde in Houston, where three points would keep them alive for the third-place wildcard.
Cape Verde are making their World Cup debut, having qualified out of CAF Group D ahead of Cameroon, winning 7 of 10 games and conceding almost nothing at home. Coach Pedro Bubista has built a team defined by defensive solidarity, collective pressing, and quick counter-attacks through wide areas. Ryan Mendes is the captain and all-time top scorer, and Dailon Livramento was the standout performer during qualifying. The gap in quality between Cape Verde and Spain or Uruguay is enormous, but their match against Saudi Arabia in Houston on June 26 is a genuine 50-50 contest that could define whether they become Group H’s surprise package or a first-time participant who exits quietly.
Current standings
Top 2 teams per group qualify automatically for the Round of 32. The 8 best third-place teams across all 12 groups also advance. Tiebreakers in order: points, goal difference, goals scored, head-to-head, fair play, drawing of lots.
Best bets
Best value
Uruguay to advance from group
-1000
It seems daft to declare a -1000 bet as the best value, but Uruguay’s squad is simply too good for Saudi Arabia and Cape Verde. Valverde, Araujo and Gimenez are all starting-quality players at elite European clubs. Even if they slip up once, the third-place wildcard route in the 48-team format provides insurance. The price isn’t great, but it would take a historic collapse for Uruguay not to advance out of this group.
Match pick
Uruguay to beat Saudi Arabia (MD1)
-155
Saudi Arabia lost their manager less than two months before kick-off. Georgios Donis inherits a squad with no players outside the Saudi Pro League and faces Uruguay’s full-strength first-choice lineup in Miami. Uruguay’s transitional speed through Nunez, Valverde, and De Arrascaeta is exactly the kind of attacking pattern that tears apart Saudi Arabia’s high defensive line. Uruguay to win is the sharpest single-match play in the group.
Long shot
Cape Verde to advance from group
+250
To advance, Cape Verde almost certainly need to beat Saudi Arabia on June 26 in Houston. That match is genuinely difficult to call, with the Saudis in managerial chaos and Cape Verde arriving with strong qualifying momentum. If they take three points there and keep games close against Spain and Uruguay, the third-place wildcard is alive. The odds reflect genuine outside possibility.
Group H betting analysis
Spain at -450 to win the group is the kind of market where the only question is how much you want to allocate to a near-certainty. They are the reigning European champions, ranked 2nd in the world, and have a schedule that takes them to Atlanta twice before the potential rotation match against Uruguay in Guadalajara. In 6 qualifying games they scored 21 goals and conceded twice. No team in this group can match them in any phase of the game. The advance market at -10000 is not a betting play, but the group winner at -450 is the kind of chalk bet that makes sense as part of a World Cup portfolio.
The second-place race is where the genuine value sits. Uruguay at -1000 to advance reflects their squad quality but also prices in the Bielsa chaos factor. That chaos is real, a 5-1 loss to the United States, a run of four matches without a win, and genuine internal friction around Bielsa’s demanding methods. But it is also overstated. Valverde’s hat-trick against Manchester City for Real Madrid in March was a reminder of what this midfield engine is capable of. Araujo and Gimenez is one of the best centre-back partnerships at the tournament. The Saudi Arabia match on June 15 is effectively a must-win, and Uruguay should win it.
The Cape Verde vs Saudi Arabia match on June 26 is the most interesting tactical contest in Group H and the most important market outside of Uruguay vs Spain. Saudi Arabia arrive in significant disarray, having lost Renard, suffered a 4-0 defeat to Egypt and a 2-1 loss to Serbia in their last competitive outings, and face a Cape Verde side with strong defensive organisation, high fitness levels and nothing to lose. The draw at +250 is worth a serious look. Cape Verde held Cameroon and Angola scoreless at home during qualifying, and their 4-2-3-1 block is specifically designed to frustrate teams that want to impose themselves through possession.
Player props
LY
Lamine Yamal anytime scorer
Spain vs Cape Verde (MD1)
+130
MO
Mikel Oyarzabal anytime scorer
Spain vs Saudi Arabia (MD2)
+110
FV
Federico Valverde anytime scorer
Uruguay vs Spain (MD3)
+280
Odds correct at time of writing via FanDuel. Lines subject to change. Please gamble responsibly.
🇪🇸Spain
Luis de la Fuente · 4-3-3
Winners 2010. Euro 2024 champions
-450 group win
Team overview
Spain arrive at the 2026 World Cup as the clear tournament favourites and one of the most complete international sides assembled in years. Under Luis de la Fuente, who won the Euro 2024 title over England in the final and has lost just once in a full 90 minutes since the start of 2024, La Roja have an identity that is both stylistically distinctive and devastatingly effective. The 4-3-3 system is built around relentless pressing, quick vertical combinations, and the freedom given to wide attackers to play instinctively. In 6 UEFA qualifying games Spain scored 21 goals and conceded just twice. Lamine Yamal, who turns 19 days before the World Cup final, makes his World Cup debut and is already considered by many as the best wide player in the world. His partner Nico Williams gives Spain a second generational talent on the left. Rodri’s return from a serious knee injury, confirmed across the March 2026 window, restores the midfield anchor Spain missed for much of the Nations League cycle. Pedri and Marc Bernal provide the technical quality and energy around him. Mikel Oyarzabal leads the attack, the confirmed penalty taker and Spain’s most clinical finisher. The Spanish title challenge is not a matter of if but how far they go into the knockout rounds before facing a serious test. Group H will not provide one. Their eyes are on the final at MetLife on July 19.
Probable XI: 4-3-3
Ratings
Strengths and weaknesses
Strengths
Yamal and Williams are the most dangerous wide pairing at the tournament. Their combination play in behind the defensive line, particularly on transitions, is almost impossible to defend without a back five
Rodri’s return gives Spain the best defensive midfielder in the world. His positioning, range of passing, and ability to control tempo makes the Spain machine function at an entirely different level when he is on the pitch
Spain have a deeper squad than any team in the group. De la Fuente can rotate 4 or 5 positions without any real drop in quality, which becomes critical across three matches in 11 days in the North American heat
Weaknesses
Spain have not won a knockout round match at a World Cup since their title in 2010. They went out on penalties to Morocco in 2022, exited in the round of 16 in 2018, and were eliminated in the group stage in 2014. The weight of that knockout record is a genuine question mark
De la Fuente has shown a tendency to be conservative with rotations when results are not immediately decisive. Against Uruguay on June 26 in Guadalajara, that caution could lead to an unpredictable outcome if the group is already decided
The dependence on Rodri, now back from injury, is significant. If he picks up a knock during the group stage, the balance of the midfield shifts noticeably and Spain become easier to press off their rhythm
Model projection
Projected finish
Quarterfinals+
🇺🇾Uruguay
Marcelo Bielsa · 3-3-3-1
Winners 1930, 1950. SF 2010. QF 2022
+370 group win
Team overview
Uruguay bring one of the most contradictory dossiers to the 2026 World Cup. Marcelo Bielsa, the Argentine coaching visionary who took charge in 2023, has produced extraordinary results in qualifying, including victories over Argentina and Brazil, but also baffling collapses that include a 5-1 defeat to the United States in November 2025 and a run of four matches without a win heading into the tournament. Luis Suarez’s public comments about players approaching a breaking point under Bielsa’s intense methods attracted headlines and raised legitimate questions about squad cohesion. And yet the talent here is not in doubt. Federico Valverde at Real Madrid scored a hat-trick against Manchester City in the Champions League in March 2026 and is one of the finest central midfielders in Europe. Ronald Araujo at Barcelona and Jose Maria Gimenez at Atletico Madrid form one of the best centre-back pairings in the tournament. Darwin Nunez at Al-Hilal gives Uruguay a physical centre-forward capable of running in behind any defence. Giorgian De Arrascaeta at Flamengo provides the creative spark. The Bielsa system is a high-intensity 3-3-3-1 that asks enormous physical demands of every player but creates genuine chances in transition when it clicks. The June 15 opener against Saudi Arabia, who have just sacked their manager, is a critical platform. Win that convincingly and the tension lifts. Lose it and Group H becomes a genuine crisis.
Probable XI: 3-3-3-1
Ratings
Strengths and weaknesses
Strengths
Valverde is in the form of his career. His Champions League hat-trick against Manchester City in March 2026 confirmed he is operating at a level very few midfielders in the world can match right now
The Araujo-Gimenez centre-back pairing is arguably the best defensive unit in South America. Both play at elite Champions League level week in, week out and give Uruguay a defensive foundation that holds even when the pressing system breaks down
Nunez’s physical profile, power in behind the line and aerial ability, gives Uruguay a different attacking dimension to every other team in Group H. Against Saudi Arabia’s high defensive line in particular he should be very dangerous
Weaknesses
The tension between Bielsa’s demanding methods and the player group has been documented publicly. Luis Suarez’s comments about the squad approaching a breaking point and the persistent internal friction represent a genuine psychological risk heading into the tournament
The qualifying rollercoaster, wins over Argentina and Brazil but also 5-1 to the US and four games without a win, suggests a team that can be brilliant and then suddenly collapse. Predicting which Uruguay shows up on any given day is genuinely difficult
Muslera, the veteran goalkeeper recalled for this tournament, last played competitive international football in 2022. At 39, relying on him for three high-pressure World Cup group games is a meaningful vulnerability
Model projection
Projected finish
Round of 16
🇸🇦Saudi Arabia
Georgios Donis · 4-3-3
R16 1994. Group stage 2022
+1800 group win
Team overview
Saudi Arabia arrive at the 2026 World Cup in a state of profound disarray. Herve Renard, the French coach who masterminded their famous 2-1 defeat of Argentina at the 2022 World Cup and who had returned for a second stint in October 2024, was sacked on April 17, 2026, less than two months before their opening group match. The decision came after back-to-back friendly losses to Egypt (4-0) and Serbia (2-1) in March. Georgios Donis, the Greek manager who had been coaching Saudi Pro League club Al Khaleej, was confirmed as the replacement. He inherits a squad composed entirely of Saudi Pro League players, led by veteran captain Salem Al-Dawsari at Al-Hilal and built around a high-pressing 4-3-3 structure that Renard had refined across two World Cup campaigns. The squad is not without ability. Mohamed Kanno and Saleh Al-Khaibari provide a physically competitive midfield. Sami Al-Najei and the centre-back pairing have experience against Asian opposition. But the managerial upheaval, the modest quality level relative to Spain and Uruguay, and the compressed timeline for Donis to implement any tactical adjustments represent serious obstacles. The most realistic target for Saudi Arabia is taking maximum points from Cape Verde on June 26 in Houston and hoping for a third-place wildcard route. Anything more than that requires genuine tournament football to unfold in their favour.
Probable XI: 4-3-3
Ratings
Strengths and weaknesses
Strengths
The 2022 win over Argentina proved this squad can channel collective belief into a giant-killing result. Al-Dawsari in particular has the individual quality to produce a moment that changes a match against any opponent
Renard’s pressing system is now deeply embedded across the squad from years of repetition. Even with a new manager, the structural shape and pressing triggers should remain largely intact because the players know the system well
Playing all three group games in the United States, where Saudi Arabia have competed before and have support in the diaspora communities, provides a more comfortable environment than playing in Mexico or Canada
Weaknesses
Sacking their manager less than two months before the tournament is a crisis event, not a minor adjustment. Georgios Donis has virtually no time to integrate new ideas, change the tactical shape, or rebuild squad confidence before the tournament opens
Every player in the squad is from the Saudi Pro League. The step up in quality, physicality, pace and technical intensity against Spain and Uruguay is enormous. Al-Dawsari is 33 and showing his age at the top level
Losses of 4-0 to Egypt and 2-1 to Serbia in March 2026, both significantly inferior to Spain and Uruguay, are genuinely worrying results that were directly responsible for Renard’s dismissal. The defensive structure broke down badly against Egypt’s speed behind the high line
Model projection
Projected finish
Round of 32
🇨🇻Cape Verde
Pedro Bubista · 4-2-3-1
World Cup debut 2026
+4000 group win
Team overview
Cape Verde arrive at the 2026 World Cup as one of the tournament’s great stories. A nation of roughly 525,000 people spread across an Atlantic island archipelago, they are the third-smallest country ever to qualify for the World Cup, behind only Iceland and Curacao. Their path through CAF qualifying was anything but a fluke. Under coach Pedro Bubista, who has managed the national team since 2020 and was named CAF Coach of the Year in 2025, Cape Verde topped Group D with 23 points, winning 7 and drawing 2 of their 10 matches, finishing ahead of Cameroon and never conceding a goal at home across all 5 home games. The system is a compact 4-2-3-1 built on disciplined defensive structure, aggressive pressing to win the ball in the middle third, and fast, direct attacking through wide areas. Ryan Mendes, the captain and all-time leading scorer, is the focal point of everything going forward and handles all set pieces. Dailon Livramento was the standout performer of qualifying and gives Cape Verde a forward capable of creating chances from nothing. Roberto Lopes, the Irish-born defender who plays for Shamrock Rovers and was famously contacted by the federation through social media, has become a dependable centre-back. The task in Group H is enormous. Spain and Uruguay are simply too good for Cape Verde to take points from. But the June 26 match against Saudi Arabia in Houston is a realistic opportunity. A win or even a draw against the Green Falcons, who arrive without a settled manager and in genuine disarray, could make this the most memorable debut in the 2026 tournament.
Probable XI: 4-2-3-1
Ratings
Strengths and weaknesses
Strengths
Bubista has created a collective identity that is one of the strongest at the tournament relative to squad quality. Every player knows their role, the shape holds even under pressure, and the group is tightly bonded from 6 years together under the same manager
Cape Verde kept a clean sheet in all 5 home qualifying games and conceded very little across the campaign. Their defensive structure, a low block with two holding midfielders protecting narrow passing lanes, is specifically designed to neutralise technically superior opponents
The match against Saudi Arabia on June 26 is genuinely winnable. Saudi Arabia arrive in managerial chaos after sacking Renard, have lost 4-0 to Egypt and have no player base outside their own domestic league. Cape Verde have nothing to lose and Livramento has the individual quality to settle a tight match
Weaknesses
The quality gap between Cape Verde and Spain and Uruguay is not a small margin, it is a chasm. Spain scored 21 goals in 6 qualifying games. Cape Verde scored 17 in 10. Keeping the scorelines respectable in those two matches is the realistic ambition, not winning them
Almost all the Cape Verde squad plays outside Europe’s top five leagues, in Portugal, Cyprus, Saudi Arabia, Ireland and the lower tiers of French and Dutch football. The physical intensity and technical pace of a World Cup group stage is a significant step up from anything they have faced
Ryan Mendes is 36 and shoulders an enormous creative burden. If he is quiet or contained, Cape Verde’s ability to create chances from open play drops sharply. He is also the set-piece taker, so his form and fitness across three games in 12 days matters enormously
Model projection
Projected finish
Group stage