The “sweet trap” of topping the group—Is first place really better than second?



Many people think that finishing first in the group is definitely better than finishing second. But brothers, the knockout-stage matchups of this World Cup might be just the opposite.

After the Group K winner qualifies, they’ll most likely face the second-place team from Group L—possibly England, Ghana, or Croatia. After the Group K runner-up qualifies, their opponent will be Paraguay, Senegal, Ecuador, or the third-place team from Group L. Which do you think is easier? Obviously the latter.

Colombia has already secured a qualification spot. If they draw, they’ll finish first in the group; if they lose, they could drop to second. But the question is—do they really want to finish first in the group? First place would have to face England or Croatia, while second place might instead face Paraguay or Senegal. This isn’t a conspiracy theory—it’s math.

Portugal’s situation is slightly different. They need to win to finish first in the group; a draw puts them second. But if they lose, there’s a theoretical risk of dropping to third in the group—although the probability is very low, it isn’t zero.

So the underlying logic of this match is very subtle: Colombia may not necessarily want to win, and Portugal may not necessarily dare to lose. Both teams are making their own little calculations in their heads. When “winning” could mean a worse knockout-stage opponent, the rhythm of the match can become very strange. A draw may be a result both sides can accept.

#哥伦比亚VS葡萄牙
View Original
post-image
post-image
COL VS PRT
Colombia
3.57x
28%
Draw
4.00x
25%
Portugal
2.00x
50%
$4.94M Vol
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pinned