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Wed 1 Jul · 01:00 UTC · 03:00 CEST

MexicovEcuador

1970+48rating2023+3014thup 1fifa23rd
talismanP. Hincapié2057

Sealed. No takebacks.

Mexico to win

home 46%draw 25%away 28%

sealed Mon 29 Jun · 19:54 UTC · 21:54 CEST · nothing deleted

 

By The DeskScout sourced the formAnalyst reasoned the callGates cleared

locked Mon, 29 Jun 2026 19:54:29 GMT · model elo-davidson-features-v2

The read

No prose on this one. The desk let the number do the talking. The call stands, and it goes on the record either way.

The ratings

The two strength reads behind this fixture: our results-based rating, the same forward-only engine the sealed call uses, read monthly, and FIFA's official table. Up is stronger on both lines; green is climbing, red is sliding. Context beside the call; the sealed number does not move.

Mexico

ProofXI rating

1970+48 this year

1922 → 1970 · 13 readings

FIFA world rank

14thup 1 place on the latest list

15th → 14th · 6 lists

Ecuador

ProofXI rating

2023+30 this year

1993 → 2023 · 13 readings

FIFA world rank

23rdheld on the latest list

23rd → 23rd · 6 lists

the gap on our board today: Ecuador by 53 points

Head to head

Mexico have had the better of this fixture.

26 prior meetings · Mexico 14, drawn 8, Ecuador 4 · goals 43-27

  1. 2025Mexico 1-1 Ecuador· Friendly
  2. 2024Mexico 0-0 Ecuador· Copa América· neutral
  3. 2022Mexico 0-0 Ecuador· Friendly· neutral
  4. 2021Mexico 2-3 Ecuador· Friendly· neutral
  5. 2019Mexico 3-2 Ecuador· Friendly· neutral

source · international results feed

How we got hereWe make Mexico the stronger side, and seal the call at about 5 in 10. Open for the working.openclose

The arithmetic behind the call: a rating edge, in points, mapped to a probability.

Mexico rating edge+20
Home advantage+65
Net edge+85

Davidson Elo→1X2 turns that +85 edge into 46% / 25% / 28% for home, draw, away.

Ratings only. Recent form and rest are not modelled for national sides.

How it could go

The same sealed edge, played as goals instead of straight to a result: our goals model runs the match score by score. The call above stands, this is its texture.

Mexico

1.5

expected goals

Ecuador

1.1

expected goals

The scorelines it sees most

  • 1113 in 100
  • 1010 in 100
  • 219 in 100
the fuller goal pictureopenclose
  • 008 in 100

three or more goals: 48 in 100 · clean sheet: Mexico 32 in 100, Ecuador 23 in 100

glassbox-goals-v1, our own goals model, run from the same ratings as the call. Frequencies, never a market.

The scorecard

  • Mexico win at home.pending
  • No blowout: Mexico win by a single goal at most, if at all.pending
  • An open game in which both teams find the net.pending

The team sheets

The confirmed elevens land here when the managers show their hands, usually about 40 minutes before kickoff, each name with its rating from our player board.

kickoff Wed 1 Jul · 01:00 UTC · 03:00 CEST · kicks off in 1d 0h

The grade lands after full time.

THE DESK AT WORK

  1. ScoutSourced the inputsPulled both sides' ratings.
  2. AnalystWeighed the edgeNet edge +85 after home advantage; drafted 3 checkable claims.
  3. ModelMapped it to a distributionDavidson Elo→1X2 → 46/25/28 (home/draw/away).Favourite: Mexico · 46%
  4. ScribeFiled the readPrepared the read behind the call.
  5. GatekeeperCleared the gatesNo betting markets · Sourced facts only · No fabricated names · Falsifiable claims, all clear.
  6. The DeskLocked the callLocked Mexico v Ecuador before kickoff.

A replay of how this call was built. Real steps, paced to read. The model owns the favourite; the desk sources and explains it.

Behind the glass

The pipeline

  1. Researchinputs sourced
  2. Forecastlocked before kickoff
  3. Drafthouse template
  4. Gatesall checks passed
  5. Publishshadow
  6. Gradeafter full time (pending)

The checks

  • No betting markets

    The call is built from football strength alone, never a bookmaker's price, as an input or anywhere on the page.

  • Sourced facts only

    Every player, squad or result fact must trace to a dated source under seven days old, or it is blocked before publish.

  • No fabricated names

    A registry blocks invented or mistaken player and team names from ever reaching the page.

  • Falsifiable claims

    Each claim on the scorecard must be checkable against the final result, no vague hedging that can't be graded.