Updated Friday, July 10, 2026
The path to the trophy has narrowed dramatically following Thursday’s quarterfinal clash. France eliminated Morocco with a decisive 2-0 victory in Boston, securing their spot as the first confirmed semifinalist. By Saturday night, three additional quarterfinal matches will reduce the remaining seven contenders to just three more teams joining France in the semifinals. If you hold a futures ticket, plan to place one, or simply want to determine which nation has the strongest chance of hoisting the cup on July 19, the moment has arrived where statistical data outweighs emotional intuition.
Forecasting a tournament champion represents a fundamentally different wager than predicting a single match outcome. This distinction attracts a specific category of bettors who rely on deep analysis:
Three distinct methodologies are currently evaluating the seven remaining teams: a statistical simulation model, Polymarket prediction data, and Kalshi futures markets. These sources do not always align, and their disagreement creates the most interesting market inefficiencies. Currently, France dominates the probability landscape across all platforms, while Spain and Argentina remain strong contenders despite varying odds.
France holds the top spot with probabilities ranging from 26.1% to 33.9% across the different models. Spain follows closely in the statistical model at 25.4%, though prediction markets place them lower at 18.6% and 18.8%. England maintains a steady presence around 15.6% to 15.7% across all sources. Argentina presents a notable divergence; the statistical model rates them at 13.7%, while prediction markets favor them higher at 18.9%. The remaining teams—Belgium, Morocco, Switzerland, and Norway—occupy the lower probability tiers, with Norway showing slightly higher odds in prediction markets compared to the statistical model.
The most significant market inefficiency involves Spain. The statistical model treats them as essentially equal to France for the top position, yet both prediction markets clearly favor France as the distinct leader. This gap between model projections and crowd sentiment represents the tournament’s primary pricing discrepancy. Whether you trust the algorithm or the public crowd more is a personal choice, but recognizing this disagreement is essential before placing any wager.
also, Nate Silver’s PELE simulation model, which runs 100,000 tournament simulations, tracks a similar narrative from a different angle. Argentina and Spain were the pre-tournament co-favorites, with France joining them only after the knockout rounds commenced. However, this model flags Argentina’s rating as declining despite their defensive champion results holding up. Their path forward is described as “distinctly beatable,” highlighting that a team can continue winning while underlying performance data raises questions about sustainability.
Thursday’s match against Morocco did more than just eliminate an opponent; it reinforced the narrative surrounding France’s dominance throughout the tournament. Les Bleus won 2-0 without conceding a goal, extending their knockout-stage run where they have yet to be scored upon in two consecutive knockout matches. Kylian Mbappé’s goal in this match propelled him into the lead for the Golden Boot award. For futures bettors, this profile is ideal: a team winning comfortably, maintaining defensive solidity, and generating offensive production from their most dangerous attacker simultaneously. France now awaits the winner of the Spain versus Belgium matchup in the semifinal.
Three critical matches over two days will complete the final lineup of four semifinalists:
The winners of Saturday’s two matches will meet in the second semifinal on July 15 in Atlanta. Meanwhile, the winner of the Spain/Belgium matchup will face France on July 14 in Dallas. The tournament final is scheduled for July 19 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.
Several market types are worth understanding for those new to tournament futures betting:
As with any futures market, the prices mentioned are snapshots. They will shift rapidly once Friday and Saturday results are confirmed, so verify live odds at your sportsbook before placing any wagers.
The same regulatory rules applying to single-match betting extend to tournament futures. Single-event sports wagering became legal across Canada in 2021, but access methods vary by province. Ontario operates an open market regulated by iGaming Ontario, featuring licensed private operators like bet365, DraftKings, BetMGM, Bet99, and Sports Interaction alongside the provincial Proline+. Most other provinces route betting through their provincial lottery corporation’s platform, such as PlayNow in British Columbia, Mise-o-jeu+ in Quebec, and similar Proline-branded products elsewhere.
Key considerations for tournament-long futures bets include:
With four semifinal spots available and a genuine three-way argument at the top of the statistical model between France, Spain, and Argentina, this tournament is shaping up to be one of the most competitive World Cup finishes in recent years. The data demands close reading, but no bettor should wager the house on a perceived “sure thing.”
Odds, probabilities, and model outputs referenced above reflect data published around July 8–10, 2026, and serve informational purposes only. They will shift as results unfold. This is not financial advice; gamble responsibly.
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