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Switzerland eye knockout progression against Algeria in last-32 showdown
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Switzerlandv
Algeria
Switzerland carry a material Elo edge into their Round of 32 tie against Algeria. The model's probability sits well above the implied market prices, suggesting the desk's pick lies with the Swiss.
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Switzerland qualified atop Group B with a composed campaign, securing victories over both Bosnia and Herzegovina and Canada to finish with nine points. The model's assessment reflects the Swiss squad's tournament form—slick attacking moves in the final third, incisive buildup play, and defensive solidity that has earned consistent backing from the Elo prior. The Elo gap between the two sides is substantial, anchored in Switzerland's recent trajectory: they reached the quarter-finals of Euro 2024, topped their group ahead of France and the Netherlands, and have demonstrated the intensity and pressing that Ralf Rangnick's Austria perfected two years ago.
Algeria, by contrast, scraped through Group J on the strength of late drama. Their 3-3 draw with Austria in their final group game—secured when substitute Sasa Kalajdzic equalized in stoppage time—allowed them to progress on four points after opening defeats to Argentina (3-0) and a narrow loss to Jordan (1-2). While Riyad Mahrez remains capable of individual moments of quality, Algeria's underlying performance has been brittle: they conceded three goals to Lionel Messi's hat-trick in the opener and showed defensive lapses against both Jordan and Austria. Their path to this stage hinged on set-piece moments and fortune rather than control.
The market currently prices the two sides as near-equals or slightly favours Algeria in isolation, reflecting the inherent uncertainty of knockout football. However, the model's Elo prior—which incorporates recent international form, tournament results, and squad strength—tilts decisively toward Switzerland. The Swiss have shown they can control possession, break down organised defences, and convert their attacking opportunities with clinical efficiency. Against a side that has been reactive and prone to concentration lapses, this should prove a significant advantage.
Key tactical considerations favour Switzerland as well. Their high-pressing system and tempo in midfield should disrupt Algeria's tempo-dependent approach. Johan Manzambi, the tournament's standout young talent off the bench, offers fresh legs and creativity late in proceedings—a weapon Algeria's ageing squad will struggle to match. Mahrez, at 35 and playing in the Saudi Pro League, has less rhythm than players tested nightly in Europe's top five leagues.
The edge sits firmly with Switzerland. The desk's read is that the model's probability materially outpaces the market's implied assessment, and the Swiss should be favoured to advance.
The drivers
Substantial Elo advantage to Switzerland reflects strong tournament form and recent Euro success
Verdict key