Sure 2 Odds, 5 Odds, 10 Odds Daily

Sure 2 odds daily mean picking games with low or no risk to bet on your ticket and once your prediction comes out successful you win your bet and your stake.

Football predictions powered by historical data and statistical analysis — outcomes are never guaranteed.


Free Football Prediction

TODAY - Thursday, April 23, 2026

19:00
San Antonio Bulo Bulo
L W
- : -
Real Oruro
D L
ODDS TIPS PROB. (%) BET
1.44
1
69.44%

BET OF THE DAY

Latest Sports News

World Cup 2026 Stars to Watch as the Tournament Draws Near
Featured Apr 22, 2026
World Cup 2026 Stars to Watch as the Tournament Draws Near

Lionel Messi, Vinicius Junior, Lamine Yamal, Mohamed Salah, and Cristiano Ronaldo are shaping the build-up to the 2026 World Cup. Stars to Watch as the 2026 World Cup Approaches The frame is set now. The 2026 World Cup will run from June 11 to July 19 across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and the draw has already turned the broad idea of a tournament into actual routes and opponents. That changes how certain players are watched: not as season-long celebrities, but as men who can still tilt a group, a knockout tie, or a month of preparation with one clean action. Lionel Messi, Vinicius Junior, Lamine Yamal, Mohamed Salah, and Cristiano Ronaldo are at different points in their careers, yet all five arrive with recent evidence behind them. Messi still changes the temperature Messi remains the first name because the question around him is no longer about his quality but his condition. On September 4, 2025, Argentina beat Venezuela 3-0 at the Monumental in Buenos Aires, and Messi scored twice in his final home World Cup qualifier; the first came in the 39th minute after a quick counter with Julián Álvarez, and the second arrived four minutes after Lautaro Martínez had come off the bench to head in Nico González’s cross. Afterward, Messi admitted that age and fitness would shape his final decision on 2026, which is the realistic way to discuss a player who turns 39 in June but can still alter the speed and direction of a match in two touches. He still bends games. Vinicius now carries more of Brazil Brazil looks calmer than it did a year ago, and Vinicius is a large reason. Carlo Ancelotti began with a flat 0-0 draw away to Ecuador on June 5, but five days later, Brazil qualified by beating Paraguay 1-0 at the Neo Química Arena, with Vinicius scoring on the stroke of halftime after Matheus Cunha slipped the ball across the box. The tactical note was simple enough to spot: Brazil still shifted shape between 4-2-4 and 4-3-3, but Vinicius gave it a direct outlet whenever the possession slowed or the press needed breaking. That role is heavier now, and it suits him. Yamal is already in the decisive moments Yamal is only 18, but his recent matches already look like a tournament rehearsal. On June 5 he scored twice in Spain’s 5-4 Nations League semi-final win over France in Stuttgart, then on March 7 he gave Barcelona a 1-0 win at San Mamés with a 68th-minute curler after Pedri came off the bench to feed him, and three days later he rescued a 1-1 draw at Newcastle with a stoppage-time penalty after Harvey Barnes had put the home side ahead. People who download betting apps (Arabic: جميع برامج المراهنات) before a Spain or Barcelona match are usually tracking the same thing defenders are tracking: whether Yamal gets the ball near the touchline with enough room to drive inside onto his left foot. The burst is real. Salah still defines Egypt’s ceiling Salah’s case is more familiar, but not weaker for that. On October 8, 2025, Egypt qualified by beating Djibouti 3-0 in Casablanca, and Salah scored twice: the first was a clever toe-poke ahead of the goalkeeper, the second a controlled volleyed lob after the ball dropped kindly near the edge of the area. He had already scored in the March qualifier against Ethiopia, and the pattern stayed the same all year: Egypt leaned on his timing, his calm in the box, and his habit of turning sterile possession into a finished move. Fans can easily track all changes in odds and statistics via Melbet (Arabic: ميل بت), so the influence of Salah can’t be unseen. The team can defend without him. The attack still runs through him. Ronaldo keeps forcing the argument Ronaldo is the oldest player on this list, but he still arrives with recent international weight. Portugal beat Spain on penalties in the Nations League final on June 8 after a 2-2 draw in Munich, and Ronaldo scored the second Portuguese goal before leaving in tears after the shootout win; in November, Portugal sealed its World Cup place by crushing Armenia 9-1, a match in which Bruno Fernandes and João Neves scored hat-tricks and the team looked far less dependent on one finisher than older Portugal sides had been. That combination is what keeps Ronaldo interesting now: he is still a reference point in the box, but he is also part of a side that can survive when the game moves away from him. The age shows. The threat remains. The watchlist is not finished, but it is clear No shortlist this close to a World Cup stays fixed for long, and injuries can still alter the shape of the tournament before a ball is kicked. Even so, these five stand out because each has produced a recent match that felt like more than ordinary form: Messi against Venezuela in Buenos Aires, Vinicius against Paraguay in São Paulo, Yamal against France, Bilbao and Newcastle, Salah against Djibouti in Casablanca, and Ronaldo against Spain in Munich. Those are not old highlights pulled from memory. They are the current file. With the tournament calendar now visible and the draw already in place, the players worth watching are the ones already deciding serious games. Read More:

Quick Links