INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The United States begin their home World Cup on June 12 at Los Angeles Stadium (SoFi Stadium) as clear favorites, and the most interesting price on the board isn't who wins. It's whether Christian Pulisic gets on the scoresheet.
> Full Time — United States 4, Paraguay 1. The read held where it mattered. After an early own goal, Folarin Balogun opened the live scoring (31') and struck again before the break — the secondary call, Balogun to score first at +550, cashed. The lead position came up empty: Christian Pulisic assisted Balogun's opener but was eased off at halftime with the U.S. up 3-0, managing a hip/glute issue the staff called precautionary. Giovanni Reyna capped it with the final kick. Full result, goals and grading on the match page ▸
The Market Read
| Market | Read |
|---|---|
| Win probability | United States 64.7% (-183) · Draw 22.6% (+343) · Paraguay 12.7% (+687) |
| Over 2.5 goals | 58.9% |
| Both teams to score | 54.0% |
| Outrights | United States +5000 · Paraguay +12000 |
The position ▸ Christian Pulisic anytime — the home favorite's creator and penalty-taker, and the cleanest read on a U.S. goal. The #2 angle behind it: Folarin Balogun to score first, the in-form starter up top before Ricardo Pepi closes. The model expects the USA to control the game and open it up; the only question is whose name ends up on the goal.
The model gives the Americans a 64.7% win probability — around -183 — against Paraguay's 12.7%, with the draw at 22.6%. The live Kalshi board is more cautious, pricing the U.S. closer to 51% — which makes this the model's biggest disagreement with the market on the opening slate, and the crowd does real work in that gap: every U.S. group match is on home soil, and the model treats that as a structural edge rather than a one-night lift. In a 48-team field that rewards eight third-place teams the group math is forgiving, but a host nation wants to open with a win in front of its own supporters — and the contracts agree it should get one.
The U.S. profile is built for an open game. They press high, win the midfield physically, and are at their best attacking in transition rather than controlling possession — and set pieces are a genuine weapon. Pulisic — Captain America, the youngest player ever to captain the United States, now with 33 international goals, fifth on the all-time list — carries the attack and takes the penalties. Folarin Balogun, who scored five in his last five Ligue 1 appearances for Monaco, is the in-form starter up top, with Ricardo Pepi the clinical closer off the bench after returning from a broken arm. Over 2.5 goals leans at 58.9% and both-teams-to-score at 54% — the contracts expect goals, and they expect the favorite to supply most of them.
Behind Pulisic, the #2 angle is Folarin Balogun — and the smart way to play him is the first-goal market, not anytime. Balogun is the expected starter at center-forward and the most in-form American striker in the field, but Pepi is the likely closer, the man Pochettino turns to late. That rotation is the whole point: Balogun to score first buys the window he's actually on the pitch — a fresh No. 9 getting on the end of the set-piece and transition chances the U.S. generate — instead of paying a full-90 anytime price that leaks to Pepi once the bench opens. Pulisic anytime stays the lead; Balogun first is the cleanest second string to it.
> If the U.S. let the game slow down, the edge erodes fast. Alfaro's whole career is built on slowing games down.
The complication — and the reason Paraguay's 12.7% is a live underdog number rather than a dead one — is the man in the other technical area. Gustavo Alfaro had Ecuador overachieving at the 2022 World Cup, and now he has Paraguay compact, physical and lethal from dead balls, the exact formula that punches above its weight on this stage. Miguel Almiron is the engine: now at Atlanta United, he covered more ground per game than any midfielder in the Premier League across 2024-25, and he presses, passes and scores from distance. Antonio Sanabria is an old-school No. 9 who wins the aerial duels Alfaro's system is designed to create, and Nottingham Forest's Ramon Sosa gives them a direct option cutting in from the left.
That is the upset case, and it's a real one: frustrate the favorite, keep it level, steal it on a set piece. But the model has weighed it and still lands firmly on the United States — a clear favorite, in an open game, with a creator who touches every dangerous moment. Group D, which also includes Australia, is wide open beyond these two, which only raises the value of three points on night one. The cleanest single expression of all of it isn't the result line — it's Pulisic: on the ball, on the spot if the U.S. win one, and on the scoresheet by the time the night is over. And if you want a second string to the same bow, it's Balogun first to it off fresh legs. One of those two finds the net.
Track the live model and Kalshi reference prices on the USA vs. Paraguay match page, the Group D standings, and the World Cup hub. PredictionMarketsPicks publishes market analysis, not wagering advice. Trade responsibly.
