Back Spain to Win the World Cup

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Argentina and Spain meet in the 2026 World Cup Final on Sunday, July 19, at New York New Jersey Stadium in East Rutherford, with kickoff at 3:00 p.m. ET.

It's a final that lives up to the billing: the reigning champion and the No. 1-ranked team in the world against the reigning European champion, unbeaten in 37 straight games.

On paper, it should be a coin flip. On Kalshi, it isn't.


Spain vs Argentina Kalshi Predictions

Kalshi's outright winner contract has Spain trading at around 58¢, with Argentina at roughly 42¢, a swing of more than 15¢ in Spain's favor. On the three-way regulation-time moneyline, Spain sits near 43¢ to win in 90 minutes against Argentina's 27¢, with a draw priced around 33¢.

That's a meaningful gap for a match between the tournament's two best teams, and it hasn't come from nowhere. Spain's price only overtook the field after its semifinal win, jumping from roughly 21% pre-match to the high 50s post-match.

That kind of repricing is exactly the sort of signal prediction markets are built to surface: not just "who's better on paper," but "who does the aggregated, money-backed judgment of thousands of traders think is better right now, after the latest evidence." And right now, that judgment favors La Roja.

Here's why that lean holds up.


Spain's Defense is the Story of the Tournament

Spain has conceded a single goal across seven matches, a tournament-best mark and one of the stingiest defensive runs in modern World Cup history.

They've allowed the fewest shots on target of any team left in the field, a product of a midfield structure that wins the ball back before it ever becomes a shot.

Argentina, by contrast, has been more porous defensively and, frankly, very fortunate offensively. They needed a stoppage-time winner for the second consecutive match to get past England in the semifinal after trailing late in the game.

A final that turns into a low-event contest is a final that tilts toward the team that's better at preventing chances in the first place, and that's Spain.


Momentum is Real, and Spain Has All of It

Spain didn't stumble into this final; they routed it. A 3-0 dismantling of Austria, a 1-0 grind past Portugal, a 2-1 win over Belgium, and then a statement 2-0 win over tournament favorites France in the semifinal, a performance widely regarded as their best of the tournament.

Kalshi's own pricing history tells that story in numbers. Spain's title probability climbed from roughly 12% before the Portugal game to nearly 20% after Belgium, to 58%+ after France.

Argentina's path, meanwhile, has been increasingly precarious. They survived a 10-man Switzerland in extra time in the quarterfinals, then trailed England before Lautaro Martínez's late winner sent them through.

One team is peaking; the other is escaping.


Lamine Yamal is a True X-Factor

At 19, Yamal has been directly involved in Spain's biggest moments, most recently drawing the penalty that opened the scoring against France.

Spain's whole attacking approach is built to get the ball to him quickly and let him isolate a fullback in a 1v1, and he leads the tournament's forwards in shot-ending carries.

Argentina's coaching staff has an unenviable choice: double-team Yamal and open space for Dani Olmo and Pedro Porro underneath, or mark him straight up and live with the individual risk.

Neither is a clean answer, and it's exactly the kind of matchup problem that decides finals.


Spain's Midfield Advantage

Rodri, Pedri, Fabián Ruiz, and Olmo give Spain a passing structure and a counterpress that has suffocated every opponent so far. Spain is winning the ball back in the attacking third at one of the highest rates of any team in the last 60 years of World Cup play.

Argentina's midfield still runs largely through Messi's ability to find pockets of space, which is a matchup Rodri is specifically built to deny.

If Spain wins the territorial and possession battle in midfield, which they have in every match this tournament, Argentina will be forced into transition moments and set pieces to create anything: a much lower-probability path to goals than Spain's sustained pressure.


Depth Makes Spain Undeniable

Spain's bench has decided two of their last three games. Mikel Merino has come off the bench to score the winner against both Portugal and Belgium, a genuinely rare feat in World Cup history. At the same time, Nico Williams offers another direct, high-pace outlet if the game state calls for it.

Argentina's approach has leaned more heavily on its top-end talent delivering in the biggest moments, which has worked, but it's a higher-variance formula than Spain's "multiple guys can win it for us" depth.


Spain vs Argentina Prediction

Spain arrives at Sunday's final as the team in better form, the more defensively sound team, and the team carrying the tournament's most dangerous individual attacker, Yamal.

The Kalshi market, which has repriced Spain upward at every stage of the knockout rounds, agrees.

Argentina's ceiling is high enough that nobody should treat this as a done deal, but if you're looking for the side with the clearer path to 90-plus minutes of control, the data and the market point to the same team.

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About the Author

Doug is a college football, college basketball and MLB contributor at the Action Network. He produces content centered around actionable advice with the goal of helping readers become better bettors. He studied journalism at Rutgers and has previously covered the New York Mets, Indianapolis Colts, and Mid-Atlantic region for Perfect Game.

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