Colombia Predictions
AI-powered match predictions, accuracy tracking, and bookmaker consensus comparisons.
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📊 Past Predictions (latest 7)
Colombia and Portugal played out a goalless stalemate in what turned out to be a far tighter affair than our pre-match model had anticipated. The designated home side couldn't break through a resilient Portuguese defence, and for all the attacking intent on display, neither team found the back of the net across the ninety minutes.
Our model had backed a 2-1 scoreline with a lean towards Portugal at 38% win probability, leaving the draw at just 23% — a lean rather than a confident call. The reality was tighter than that suggested. Before kickoff, we'd flagged Colombia's strong defensive record at home and Portugal's attacking threat as the key tension in the match, but what actually unfolded was a cagey contest where both sides' defences held firm. The stakes couldn't have been higher in a World Cup group game with qualification on the line, yet neither team managed to find a breakthrough. That defensive solidity — particularly from Colombia on home soil — proved decisive in keeping the scoreline locked at zero.
It's a clean miss for our model. We'd weighted the match towards goals and a Portugal win, but the match played out as a low-scoring draw instead. Both teams will feel they had chances to win it, but neither could convert. On a night where the pressure was immense and both sides were desperate for three points, goalkeeping and defensive discipline won the day — a reminder that even in high-stakes football, sometimes the most straightforward outcomes still find ways to surprise.
Colombia secured a 1-0 victory over Congo DR in a World Cup group-stage encounter that fell well short of pre-match expectations. Munoz broke the deadlock in the 76th minute with an assist from Quintero, proving decisive in a match that offered far fewer goals than anticipated. The result kept Colombia's tournament hopes intact while Congo DR's chances of progression grew increasingly slim.
Our model predicted a 3-1 Colombia win, assigning the outcome a 77% probability of a Colombian victory. The direction of that call proved correct—Colombia did win—but the match unfolded in a tighter, lower-scoring fashion than the model had weighted. Before kickoff, the prediction reflected Colombia's superior form (averaging 2.45 goals scored and boasting a strong record) against Congo DR's limited attacking output (1.19 goals per game with minimal away-match experience). The model expected those disparities to translate into a goal-heavy affair. Instead, defenses held firm for most of the contest, and a single second-half strike ultimately separated the sides.
This represented a partial miss: we correctly identified Colombia as favorites and the likely victors, but misjudged the attacking momentum. The stakes—a World Cup group stage where Colombia needed points and Congo DR faced potential elimination—aligned with our pre-match framing of a one-sided encounter. The execution, however, proved more cautious than the statistical foundation suggested it would be.
Colombia secured a 3-1 victory over Uzbekistan in their World Cup group stage opener, overcoming a spirited second-half response to assert their attacking superiority. Diaz opened the scoring for Colombia in the 40th minute with an assist from L. Diaz, before Fayzullaev levelled for Uzbekistan in the 60th minute. The match swung decisively in Colombia's favour when Diaz scored again just five minutes later, assisted by Puerta, and Campaz sealed the result with a late goal in the 90+9th minute, set up by C. Hernandez.
The prediction model leaned toward a 0-2 Colombia win, assigning that scoreline a 73% combined probability of a Colombian victory. While the result direction proved correct—Colombia did win—the actual scoreline departed from the forecast. The model had weighted a clean sheet heavily, anticipating Uzbekistan would struggle to create meaningful chances against Colombia's defensive setup and attacking tempo. Fayzullaev's 60th-minute goal disrupted that expectation, puncturing what had been a controlled Colombian first half. Before kickoff, the underlying form metrics supported Colombia's dominance: their recent attacking output and clear edge in overall quality suggested they would control proceedings, and for large stretches they did. What the forecast did not account for was Uzbekistan finding a moment of cohesion in midfield to breach a Colombian defence that, while dominant, proved penetrable at crucial junctures.
The match illustrated why tournament football rewards both preparation and adaptation. Colombia's attacking quality—evident in Diaz's two-goal contribution and the clinical finishing late on—never wavered, but the path to victory was messier than the pre-match probabilities had suggested. For CleverScores' accuracy record, the call captured the likely winner but missed the likely margin, a reminder that even strong statistical leans remain forecasts, not certainties.