Belarus vs Scotland | Football Previews & Free Betting Tips | 8th September

🗞️ Introduction

Belarus v Scotland lands on Monday 8 September 2025 at the ZTE Aréna, Zalaegerszeg (Hungary), played behind closed doors. It’s Matchday 2 in World Cup qualifying Group C after Scotland’s disciplined 0–0 in Copenhagen and Belarus’s bruising 1–5 defeat away to Greece. With Greece already three points up, this is a chance for Scotland to bank a first win and keep control of the group narrative.

Expect a cagey tempo without the usual crowd noise; the “home” side have been nomadic for a while and often sit in a compact 4-4-2/4-2-3-1, banking numbers and working set-pieces. Scotland are flexible between a back three and a back four; the Copenhagen template—two honest runners up top, industrious midfield, and width from the full-backs—worked well and should translate here against a deeper block.

👕 Team News

Belarus (24-man squad confirmed for September): Pavlyuchenko, Ignatovich, Lapoukhov; Martynovich, Pechenin, Zakhar Volkov, Karpovich, Malkevich, Zabelin, Pigas, Parkhomenko, Kalinin; Ebong, Yablonski, Korzun, Gromyko, Demchenko, Myakish; Kovalev, Sedko, Barkovsky, Melnichenko, Malashevich, Pasevich.

Notes: Senior centre-back Sergei Politevich is not listed for this window. Veteran Alyaksandr Martynovich is included and provides leadership at the back.

Scotland (updated official squad): Clark, Gunn, Kelly; Hanley, Hendry, Hickey, Hyam, Max Johnston, McKenna, Robertson, Souttar, Doig; Christie, Ferguson, Gannon Doak, Gilmour, McGinn, McLean, McTominay, Lennon Miller; Adams, Bowie, Dykes, Hirst.

Withdrawals since the initial call-up: Anthony Ralston and Kieran Tierney are out; Josh Doig comes in. Expect Scotland to keep the double-nine dynamic (Dykes and Adams) with McTominay and McGinn arriving late from midfield, Robertson/Hickey providing the width.

📋 Form

Belarus (last 10 competitive): a remarkably low-event run—tight draws, the odd 1–0 either way—until the heavy loss in Greece. Their last 10 competitive results read five clean sheets and Under 2.5 goals in 9/10. Average output approx. 0.5 scored and 0.67 conceded per game, possession in the low-40s, and plenty of defending in their box.

Scotland (recent competitive): Nations League + play-offs then the Copenhagen draw: a mixed bag with several one-goal games. Averages sit around 1.17 scored and 1.34 conceded, with a clean sheet in 3–4 of the last 10 and a slight tilt towards games featuring goals (just over half over 2.5). The trend: Scotland are comfortable without the ball, but most effective when they turn regains into quick, direct attacks.

📊 Key Match Stats
Tip: on smaller phones, rotate your device sideways for the full table. The cards below show the same data in a mobile-friendly layout.

Metric Belarus Scotland
Goals scored per match 0.50 1.17
Goals conceded per match 0.67 1.34
Clean sheet rate 50% 34%
Average possession 42% 46%
Corners per match 4.33 3.67
Shots per match 8.7 9.6
Yellow cards per match 3.0 1.5
Pass completion 77% 84%
Under / Over 2.5 goals Under 90% / Over 10% Under 44% / Over 56%
Average points per match 1.50 1.22

Goals scored per match

Belarus0.50
Scotland1.17

Goals conceded per match

Belarus0.67
Scotland1.34

Clean sheet rate

Belarus50%
Scotland34%

Possession

Belarus42%
Scotland46%

Corners per match

Belarus4.33
Scotland3.67

Shots per match

Belarus8.7
Scotland9.6

Yellow cards per match

Belarus3.0
Scotland1.5

Pass completion

Belarus77%
Scotland84%

Under / Over 2.5 goals

BelarusUnder 90% / Over 10%
ScotlandUnder 44% / Over 56%

Average points per match

Belarus1.50
Scotland1.22

🏟️ Home vs Away Form
Belarus (home-designated, competitive — mostly neutral venues)

Pragmatic and low-margin. A high share of draws and narrow scorelines, with frequent clean sheets when they keep the penalty-area discipline. Goals for remain scarce (around half a goal a game), but they do earn set-plays and can be stubborn when the first line is not broken early.

Scotland (away, competitive)

Battle-hardened. The 0–0 in Copenhagen underlined the structure and togetherness. Away matches often come down to one moment—set-play delivery, a second-phase shot or a turnover—and Scotland are increasingly comfortable in that space. Clean sheets are achievable when they control crosses and second balls.

⚔️ Attack vs Defence

Legend:
Goals For
Goals Against
Tip: rotate your device on mobile if the chart looks cramped.




KickTheBookies BTTS likelihood: 35%

🥅 Players to Watch
  • Max Ebong (Belarus) — the energetic midfielder carries much of Belarus’s transition threat and late box entries. If Belarus are to nick anything, his set-piece presence and second-ball strikes are key.
  • Andrew Robertson (Scotland) — Scotland’s best ball-progressor from deep. His overlaps and cut-backs are the supply line for Dykes/Adams, and his deliveries tilt the set-play battle.
  • Scott McTominay (Scotland) — excels at arriving unseen and finishing moves; Belarus’s low block will invite those late runs to the penalty spot.

🧠 KickTheBookies Prediction

Belarus 0–2 Scotland. The Scots’ structure, depth in midfield, and quality of delivery should tell over 90 minutes. With Belarus struggling for open-play output and the game behind closed doors on neutral turf, Scotland’s patience plus set-play threat looks decisive.

💡 Betting Tips

Main pick: Scotland to win. Rationale: superior chance creation, better set-pieces, and Belarus’s very low scoring rate in competitive games.

Value angle: Scotland -1 on the handicap. If Scotland score first, Belarus must open up, which plays into the visitors’ crossing and counter patterns.


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