Brazil's front line and wide output make the goals market the dominant betting axis. Sportytrader's projection of Brazil over 2.5 goals (1.46) is consistent with many previews that expect multiple strikes from Vinícius Júnior, Raphinha and Matheus Cunha against a low block that has shown limited recovery after conceding in their opener. The balance here is simple: Brazil need a convincing win after a 1-1 draw with Morocco and will push high tempo; Haiti set up compactly but lack the personnel to smother sustained wide overloads.
That game state favours both an outright home win and sizeable goal totals. A Draw No Bet on Brazil reduces the risk of an unexpected counter result while still capturing the price on a team expected to dominate possession and create high-value chances. MrFixitstips and several match previews back Brazil to win comfortably, which explains shorter prices on the 1X2 market and why a slightly bigger liability like Brazil to Win carries more reward but still limited risk.
The total goals markets open two consistent threads. Multiple outlets including Gainblers push over 3.5 goals (around 1.95), while Casasdeapuestas highlights first-half scoring potential with first-half over 1.5 goals (1.89). Those angles align: Brazil should aim to settle the tie early, leaving Haiti to chase and expose gaps on transitions. The main counterargument is Haiti's discipline; betting lines that pay modest odds for an early Brazil lead are priced on the assumption Haiti will not immediately collapse.
A richer alternative is backing a specific correct score that captures the expected dominance but pays for uncertainty around Haiti finding a consolation. Correct-score options reflect the consensus that Brazil will control periods of the match but that Haiti will occasionally threaten off set-pieces or counters.
Roughly two thirds of previews lean to a high-scoring Brazil win, a minority highlight Haiti's organisation as a limiting factor. Markets will move if Brazil score early; without that early goal the balance shifts toward lower totals and narrower win margins.