Portugal vs DR Congo: why two goals may be one too many
Let's get the obvious out of the way: Portugal are better. Several rungs better, in fact — in technical security, midfield press-resistance and the kind of bench that can summon Pedro Neto, Conceição or João Félix when the starters run dry. Nobody is disputing the favouritism here.
What I am disputing is the tidiness of it. The line treats this as a comfortable two-goal win, and that is precisely where the story gets a little too neat for a World Cup opener.
The Dias-shaped hole
The single most under-priced detail is the absence of Rúben Dias. Lusa-reported coverage had him training apart from the group again on the eve of the match, having not completed a full team session since Portugal landed in Palm Beach.
Dias is the organiser, the duel-winner, the man who runs the back line and dominates in the air. Tomás Araújo and Gonçalo Inácio are fine deputies, but a less battle-tested pairing is exactly the sort of thing that gets exposed by quick releases for Wissa and Bakambu into the channels.
Add Chancel Mbemba — a captain who has decided knockout ties with late corners against Cameroon and converted the decisive penalty against Nigeria — and DR Congo suddenly have a credible route to a goal of their own.
A team that thrives in ugly
Then there is the nature of the opponent. DR Congo are a survival side, perfectly at home in scrappy, low-scoring affairs: a goalless containment of Denmark, a late winner over Cameroon, penalty nerve against Nigeria, an extra-time squeeze past Jamaica.
They sit deep, clog the centre and wait. Sides built like that rarely get blown out by two — and the emotional charge of a first World Cup appearance since 1974 only stiffens the spine.
The local previews agree. Observador warns the game can turn "nervoso, físico e bem mais comprido" if Portugal don't strike early — which is also why I left the Over alone. If this becomes the awkward, attritional grind everyone fears, both goals and a comfortable margin go missing together.
The +1.5 covers two friendly outcomes: a one-goal Portugal win, or a Congolese point. For a disciplined, physically robust team riding this much motivation, neither is far-fetched.







