Mexico vs South Korea: a cagey first-place decider made for the Under
Picture the scene in Guadalajara: two sides that both walked away from opening day with a smile, now staring at each other knowing the winner all but books the next round. That's not a recipe for a carnival — it's a recipe for caution.
Here's the lovely little quirk of this group: with points level, the head-to-head result matters before goal difference. So neither coach has any reason to chase a hatful of goals — they just need to come out ahead. That single rule quietly squeezes the air out of the scoring.
Two boxers who'd rather counter-punch
South Korea, sensible folks, aren't about to press themselves dizzy in the Guadalajara heat. Expect them compact in a mid-block, waiting to spring Son Heung-min and Lee Kang-in into space at the right moment rather than throwing bodies forward all night.
Mexico, for their part, look far more comfortable nursing a slim lead behind a roaring home crowd than tearing the game open. And there's a reason to keep numbers home: César Montes is suspended, so Edson Álvarez drops into central defence without much full-match rhythm since February surgery.
The patch-up that begs for restraint
Korea carry the sharper individual attackers — Son, Lee Kang-in and Hwang In-beom thrive in exactly the transition gaps a reshuffled centre-back can leave behind. That's precisely why Aguirre's men will want to stay solid first and gamble only second.
Both opening games told the same tale: Mexico's 2-0 over South Africa and Korea's 2-1 comeback past the Czechs were tidy, managed afternoons, not shootouts. Nothing about either team's temperament screams open floodgates.
Why the line leaves room
The bookmaker's own instinct leans toward the Under, and that instinct is right — but at this price there's still a bit of breathing space left on the table. Backing Mexico outright feels a touch short given the defensive patch-up, and Korea at near 4.00 fights a real home edge. The match shape, though, points one clear direction.
A high-stakes, head-to-head-matters decider between two organised sides in the heat? That's where the goals tend to dry up. The first goal becomes a cue to slow down, not speed up — and that's all the Under needs.









