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Switzerland Predictions

AI-powered match predictions, accuracy tracking, and bookmaker consensus comparisons.

Total Predictions
8
0 upcoming · 8 settled
Result Accuracy
63%
5 / 8 correct
BTTS Hit Rate
50%
4 / 8 calls
Over 2.5 Hit Rate
38%
3 / 8 calls

📊 Past Predictions (latest 8)

Fri 3 Jul 2026
2–1
2–0

Switzerland took control of this knockout tie early and never let go, securing a 2-0 win over Algeria to advance from the group stage. Breel Embolo opened the scoring in the 10th minute with an assist from Johan Manzambi, and Dan Ndoye added a second straight after the restart in the 46th minute to seal it. It was a composed, clinical performance from the Swiss — the kind you'd expect from a side with stronger squad depth in a do-or-die fixture.

Our model predicted a 2-1 scoreline, backing Switzerland at 62% to win. We got the result direction spot on, but missed on the margin — Algeria didn't find the back of the net despite being in a knockout where both teams had everything to play for. Before kickoff, the model factored in Switzerland's recent attacking form at home and Algeria's vulnerability at the back, which roughly lined up with how the match unfolded. What tipped the balance toward a Swiss win was their superior squad depth and the competitive intensity you'd expect when elimination's on the line. The one-goal cushion we'd leaned toward didn't materialize, though — Switzerland's second-half control and Algeria's inability to create clear chances meant the deficit widened rather than staying tight.

On balance, it's the kind of call that gets the direction right but leaves room for the specific scoreline to move either way. This time it moved in Switzerland's favour.

Wed 24 Jun 2026
2–1
2–1

Switzerland dispatched Canada 2-1 in a World Cup group-stage clash that unfolded much as our model anticipated beforehand. The Swiss took control early in the second half, with Vargas opening the scoring in the 46th minute off an assist from Manzambi, then Manzambi himself doubled the lead just eleven minutes later with help from Embolo. Canada pulled one back through David in the 76th minute, assisted by Saliba, but couldn't find an equalizer despite the late pressure.

Our pre-match prediction of a 2-1 Switzerland win landed spot-on, matching both the exact scoreline and the result direction. That said, the model had assigned a 48% probability to a Swiss victory — a lean rather than a confident call, with a draw at 31% and a Canada win at 21% representing genuinely plausible alternatives. The match played out in line with the underlying form and motivation levels we'd flagged: a tournament fixture where both sides came with clear intent, Switzerland's recent solidity translating to control, and Canada capable of a goal but ultimately outmatched.

The 2-1 scoreline reflected what we'd projected as the likeliest outcome among several realistic paths. Both teams to score and over 2.5 goals were always in the mix given the stakes and the teams involved. Switzerland's second-half dominance — two goals in quick succession — proved the difference, though Canada's late strike ensured it stayed competitive.

Thu 18 Jun 2026
2–0
4–1

Switzerland's 4-1 victory over Bosnia & Herzegovina proved more decisive than our pre-match model anticipated. The model had leaned toward a 2-0 Swiss win—the most likely single outcome at 70% probability for a home victory overall—but underestimated Switzerland's attacking potency once the match unfolded. Bosnia & Herzegovina, expected to defend cautiously with limited creative output, conceded four goals, a significantly heavier defeat than the defensive structure suggested beforehand.

The prediction correctly identified the result direction: Switzerland dominated as the structurally superior side, and their ELO advantage translated into three points. However, the margin of victory revealed a gap between our pre-match expectations and how the designated home side's attacking play actually developed. Before kickoff, Bosnia's winless form across their last three matches and low-scoring pattern suggested a tight, low-volume contest. The match instead produced a more open game than those underlying metrics had weighted, with Switzerland converting their opportunities at a higher rate than a conservative model typically projects.

This outcome sits outside the modal prediction but within the broader probability distribution we assigned to a Swiss win. The 70% win probability reflected genuine uncertainty around the scoreline itself—plausible outcomes ranged across several goals and margins. Switzerland's dominant performance validates the pre-match lean toward them, even if the specific 4-1 scoreline represented the upper range of what our model had considered most likely. It's a reminder that while aggregate form and structural strength point clearly in one direction, individual matches retain inherent variance in how decisively those advantages manifest.

Sat 13 Jun 2026
1–2
1–1

Qatar and Switzerland played out a 1-1 draw in their World Cup group-stage opener, a result that defied pre-match expectations heavily favoring the Swiss. Embolo opened the scoring from the penalty spot in the 17th minute, putting Switzerland in control. Qatar mounted a late assault, however, and equalized deep into stoppage time when Khoukhi headed home a cross from Al Amin in the 90+4th minute, rescuing a point from the brink of defeat.

Our model predicted a 1-2 Switzerland victory, assigning the draw only a 15% probability before kickoff. The expectation reflected a significant gap in tournament readiness: Qatar's inconsistent recent form and limited scoring output contrasted sharply with Switzerland's superior underlying metrics and experience at this level. On paper, the draw ranked as a plausible but secondary outcome—one that could emerge if Qatar found rare defensive solidity and fortune in set pieces or late chances. The match itself bore out parts of that pre-match assessment: Switzerland dominated phases and created the cleanest chance (the penalty), yet Qatar's resilience and final-minute intervention prevented the expected Swiss control from translating into the predicted margin of victory.

This outcome sits as a reminder that tournament football tolerates uncertainty. A single set piece and late recovery can rewire what the data suggested. For Qatar, the draw preserves their group-stage viability; for Switzerland, it represents two points dropped from a position of perceived comfort. Neither team's display fundamentally rewrote the underlying ability gap, but football scorelines, unlike model probabilities, know only the final number.

Sat 6 Jun 2026
1–0
1–1
Sun 31 May 2026
3–1
4–1
Tue 31 Mar 2026
2–2
0–0
Fri 27 Mar 2026
1–1
3–4
Predictions are for information and entertainment only — not financial advice. 18+. Gambling can be addictive. BeGambleAware.org.