Seoul's match control is the clearest route to a straightforward result here. Their attack has produced 23 goals this season while conceding nine; that goal differential pairs with a strong home profile and a run where analysts note eight wins from eleven fixtures. Those facts push the 1X2 market toward a home win, but the value question sits around margin and second-order outcomes.
Anyang are not bereft of attacking threat — 14 goals so far — which keeps the BTTS case credible. Seoul have four clean sheets compared with Anyang's single shutout, so the balance favours the hosts preventing at least one goal. The underlying tug-of-war is Seoul's capacity to sustain sustained pressure in their final third versus Anyang's tendency to concede from transitions and set plays. That tension supports a goals market split: a decent chance of goals, but not guaranteed high-scoring excess.
Asian handicap frames the most interesting risk/reward. A -1 line on Seoul requires a two-goal margin but reflects the qualitative gap reported across previews. Foxbet's lean toward a -1 handicap underlines that some tipsters expect a clear Seoul victory rather than a narrow one. Against that, Anyang's capacity to score and Seoul's occasional defensive lapses mean the handicap is far from certain.
Cards and corners present secondary edges. Seoul press higher and win more corners at home; Anyang commit more fouls in narrow games. A corners market that prices around nine or ten looks aligned with the match script: Seoul dominate territory and set-piece opportunities while Anyang look to nick chances.
Taken together, the strongest single-line is a conservative home outcome that preserves downside; the most speculative line is a Seoul -1. The market consensus is already skewed to the hosts, leaving alternative markets (BTTS, corners) as the best ways to reflect confidence in Seoul while acknowledging Anyang's goal threat.
Expect the match to unfold with Seoul dictating tempo and Anyang trying to punish mistakes on the break.