Paraguay vs France: the +1.5 cushion with a rock-solid low block

The World Cup Round of 16 in Philadelphia serves up a classic mismatch on paper: France, the tournament favorites, against Paraguay, the gritty underdog that just eliminated Germany. But the story is far more nuanced than the odds suggest.
The Tchouameni ripple effect
France's midfield machinery took a late hit when Aurelien Tchouameni was ruled out with a thigh injury. That changes the dynamic in the double pivot, where Manu Kone steps in — a player with more forward drive and less positional discipline than Tchouameni.
Kone's eagerness to carry the ball leaves gaps that Paraguay can exploit on the break. Against a side that defends deep and waits for transitional moments, that subtle loss of control could be decisive.
Paraguay: the bunker specialists
Paraguay have built their entire World Cup campaign on a defensive blueprint. They held Germany to 1-1 over 120 minutes in the Round of 32, then won on penalties, and earlier kept clean sheets against two group-stage opponents.
Even against USA, the 1-4 defeat was misleading: an own goal and a red card broke the game open. In three of four matches, Paraguay have covered the +1.5 handicap. This is not a fluke — it is a deliberate system of low-event football.
Diego Gomez returns — a massive boost
Suspended against Germany, Diego Gomez is back in the engine room. His presence alongside captain Andres Cubas adds stability and ball progression that was sorely missed in the second half against the Germans.
With Gomez on the pitch, Paraguay can resist France's pressure more effectively and launch faster counters through Miguel Almiron and Julio Enciso. Alfaro's squad is almost at full strength, while France adjust on the fly.
France’s attacking brilliance vs Paraguay’s resilience
Yes, Kylian Mbappe has six goals this tournament, and the French attack is elite. But Paraguay are not a team that gets blown away early. They absorb pressure, stay compact, and make the game ugly.
If France scores early, the script changes, but if they struggle to break down the low block — a familiar tournament frustration — the game stays tight. The +1.5 line at 2.286 reflects a market that underestimates Paraguay's proven ceiling against elite sides.





















