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#广场预测世界杯赢40000U Argentina vs Spain: New Kings Ascend or Old Gods Return? — Preview of the 2026 North America World Cup Final (Score Prediction: Argentina 2-1 Spain)
After all the way through this World Cup, we’re finally set for a showdown worthy of the word “final.” This isn’t a battle for traffic, and it isn’t a grudge match—this is the ultimate clash of football philosophies: precision control versus bloody counterattacks; 36 games unbeaten versus championship heritage; Europe’s new rising force versus South America’s seasoned old guard.
01 First, talk about the third-place match: a game like an NBA All-Star
England 6:4 France. This isn’t a football score—it’s an NBA All-Star score. Two teams overflowing with attacking talent, in the third/fourth-place match, finally shed the pressure and played the wildest game of this World Cup. Mbappé scored twice, Kane converted a penalty, Saka had a one-man run, and Joaméni hit a long-range worldie—goals were one more spectacular than the next, and defense was one more loose than the next. In the end, England went home with a bronze medal, while France left with the badge of “best attacking firepower.” But this third-place match also told us a truth: in this World Cup, defense decides the ceiling, while attack decides the box office. France and England were both box-office attractions, yet they both lost—losing to two teams whose defensive discipline was stricter.
Spain and Argentina are exactly those two teams.
02 Spain: a precise machine with 36 games unbeaten
Under De la Fuente, Spain is no longer the Spain of a decade ago that was simply “possession until the end.”
Group stage: Spain 2-0 Croatia (possession 64%, shots 17-5) Spain 1-0 Italy (possession 71%, shots 14-3) Spain 3-0 Morocco (possession 68%, shots 19-4)
Knockouts: Round of 16: Spain 2-0 Portugal (Iberian derby, possession 72%)
Quarterfinal: Spain 1-0 Belgium (defensive textbook, possession 66%)
Semifinal: Spain 3-1 Switzerland (possession 69%, shots 21-6)
The data doesn’t lie: in six knockout matches, they conceded only one goal, and they blanked their opponents in the first two knockout games. Spain’s defensive discipline is suffocating. The wide-corridor duo of Nico Williams and Yamal is the sharpest explosive point of this World Cup, Rodri in midfield is like an engine that never stops, and Pedri’s penetration and orchestration is already at master level. 36 games unbeaten—this isn’t luck; it’s a precise system running.
03 Argentina: a blood-red journey of the defending champions
Scaloni’s Argentina has been playing catch-up from start to finish.
Group stage: Argentina 2-1 Saudi Arabia (a nail-biting comeback, possession rate only 48%) Argentina 1-0 Poland (grinding out a win, shots 11-9) Argentina 2-0 Mexico (possession rate 51%, efficiency wins)
Knockouts: Round of 16: Argentina 2-1 Denmark (a winner in the 87th minute, possession rate only 44%)
Quarterfinal: Argentina 1-0 Uruguay (La Plata derby, a high-intensity brawl)
Semifinal: Argentina 2-1 England (classic football rivals, possession rate 42%)
The data also doesn’t lie: Argentina concede in every round of the knockout stage (except against Uruguay). Their defense isn’t as solid as Spain’s. But their attack every match has someone standing up—Álvarez’s runs, Di María (or his successor)’s big-game attributes, and Enzo’s midfield coverage.
Most crucially: Argentina’s possession rate in every match is lower than their opponents’. This is an Argentina that can accept “not having the ball.” They don’t need possession; they just need opportunities.
04 Five key matchups
1️⃣ Nico Williams vs Molina
Spain’s left winger is a nightmare for every right-back in this World Cup. Nico’s pace, burst, and one-on-one breakthrough success rate (74%) rank first among all wide forwards. Argentina’s right-back Molina defends aggressively; what he fears most is this kind of speed-based bomber—against England in the semifinals, he’s already been beaten by Foden twice.
⚠️ If Argentina doesn’t arrange extra help, this flank will go wrong.
2️⃣ Argentina’s double pivot vs Pedri + Rodri
Spain’s midfield control—the interceptions and passing from Rodri as a holding midfielder, and the penetration and orchestration from Pedri as an advanced midfielder—is the lifeblood of Spain’s system. Enzo and De Paul of Argentina need full-energy output of “staying close all over the pitch.” If you let Pedri get comfortable receiving and turning, the match tempo will be fully under Spain’s control. ⚔️ This is a midfield grind—whoever runs out of gas first collapses first.
3️⃣ Messi’s spiritual legacy
Messi isn’t on the pitch, but he’s in the blood of every Argentina player. After winning in 2022, this group went through the baptism of “the last dance.” The psychological pressure Big Martin exerted in the penalty shootout, Otamendi’s roars, Paredes’s relentless sticking it out—these are “big-game experience” that data can’t capture. Spain’s young core (Yamal, 17; Pedri, 22; Nico, 23) has technique that’s hard to solve, but a World Cup final’s mindset is another matter.
4️⃣ Álvarez vs Laporte — Álvarez
He’s already scored 4 goals in this World Cup, and his running stats average 11.2 kilometers per game—he’s the kind of profile defenders hate most: constant interweaving runs, constant harassment. Spain’s center-back Laporte’s defensive ability is top-tier, but he has one weakness: when facing small, quick forwards, his turn is a bit slow.
This is a duel between a “master of off-ball runs” and a player with “excellent positional sense.”
5️⃣ Set-piece offense and defense
In Argentina’s knockout phase, 37% of their goals came from set pieces. Spain’s one goal conceded in the knockout phase also came from a corner. If the final enters a stalemate phase, set pieces are likely to become the weapon that breaks the balance. Argentina has Otamendi’s headers; Spain has Rodri/Lemarno’s aerial threats at the point.
The deciding factor in a final might not be a beautiful open-play strike, but an ugly corner routine turned into a goal.
05 Tactical simulation: two possible scripts
Script A: Spain controls — In the first 20 minutes, Spain leads with over 70% possession, 2-0 or 2-1. Argentina compresses their defense and gives up midfield possession. At the 35th minute, Nico Williams breaks through and whips in a cross; the near-post scramble finishes it. In the second half, Argentina pushes up for a comeback, but Spain seizes a counterattack chance to score again. In the final 20 minutes, Argentina fights desperately to pull one back, but there isn’t enough time.
Conclusion: Spain’s most stable version of the system. The premise is that Pedri isn’t locked down in midfield.
Script B: Argentina’s comeback — 2-1 (extra time/penalties). Argentina proactively gives up possession; in the first 30 minutes they exhaust Spain’s midfield with high-intensity pressing. After minute 60, Spain’s stamina drops, and Argentina uses Álvarez’s interweaving runs and substitute surprise tactics to assault the back line. The deadlock is broken at 78 minutes. Spain equalizes at 85 minutes. In extra time or a penalty shootout, Argentina takes the win thanks to the psychological advantage of goalkeeper Big Martin and their championship pedigree.
Conclusion: The script of the 2022 World Cup champion team. The best thing about this Argentina is how they turn matches into a muddy quagmire.
06 Ultimate prediction🏆
Score prediction: Argentina 2-1 Spain (120 minutes or penalties). This isn’t a “technical” prediction—it’s a “narrative” prediction. If you only look at paper strength, statistical models, and player market values—Spain are stronger. 36 games unbeaten, only one goal conceded in the knockout stage, the most precise midfield machine in all of Europe. But a World Cup final has never been a math problem—it’s narrative.
From 2022 to 2026, this group of Argentina has been through the harshest kind of trial—they know how to win when the game is at its ugliest. And even though Spain plays the most beautiful football, the final is different from the semifinals and different from the group stage. The tension, the pressure, the history—only those who have “been through it” know how to process it.
Spain will break the deadlock first. Argentina will equalize. Then as time keeps running out, the match gets uglier, more fragmented. In the end—whether in extra time or a penalty shootout—Argentina takes the victory.
Spain gets the ticket to the World Cup.
Argentina gets the World Cup script. And the World Cup has always only looked at the story.