Belarus vs Scotland | Football Previews & Free Betting Tips | 8th September
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.
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.
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.
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
Goals conceded per match
Clean sheet rate
Possession
Corners per match
Shots per match
Yellow cards per match
Pass completion
Under / Over 2.5 goals
Average points per match
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.
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.
Legend:
Goals For
Goals Against
Tip: rotate your device on mobile if the chart looks cramped.
- 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.
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.
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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