| Sportsbook | Curaçao | Draw | Ivory Coast |
|---|---|---|---|
| Betovo | 21 | 8.5 | 1.14 |
| Zoccer | 22.5 | 8.25 | 1.16 |
| Sports Interaction | 17.55 | 8.47 | 1.12 |
| Goals | Over 2.5 | Under 2.5 |
|---|---|---|
| Lines not yet available | ||
Curaçao face an enormous challenge here. After losing heavily to Ecuador in Matchday 1, they now need a result to stay alive and face the reigning Africa Cup of Nations holders. Their 5-4-1 defensive structure will be pushed to the limit. Leandro Bacuna drives from midfield and can pick a pass, but the team lacks the goal threat to punish Ivory Coast’s expansive defence. They need to stay organised for as long as possible, frustrate Ivory Coast in the first half, and hope for a set-piece moment. Why this matters: the market has priced this correctly — Curaçao at 22.5 is not a betting proposition, but the draw at 8.25 could attract interest from those fading Ivory Coast’s efficiency.
Ivory Coast are one of Africa’s most talented squads in a generation. Sébastien Haller leads the attack after a remarkable recovery from a serious illness, his hold-up play and aerial threat making him a constant danger. Nicolas Pépé brings directness and pace on the right, while Franck Kessié provides the engine in midfield. Their 4-3-3 presses aggressively and recovers the ball quickly in the final third. Against Curaçao’s 5-4-1, Ivory Coast will have possession but will need to be patient in finding the gaps. The quality difference here is enormous and a commanding win is expected. Why this matters: Ivory Coast at ~1.16 is short but correct — this game should not be close.
This is a mismatch in every department. Haller will dominate the aerial battle, Pépé will isolate Curaçao’s left back repeatedly, and Kessié’s power in midfield will be impossible to contain. Curaçao will defend with everything they have but the quality gap is simply too large. Ivory Coast -2 Asian handicap at ~1.70 is the smart play — four goals is a realistic and conservative target.

Cole Gallagher covers soccer betting for WorldCupBetting.ca, specialising in match predictions, odds analysis and tournament futures. Based in Toronto, he has followed the Canadian men’s national team since their 2022 qualifying campaign and brings a line-shopping, data-first approach to every pick.
