Gemini 3.1 Pro predicts a draw in this Group H · Matchday 1 match at Hard Rock Stadium · Miami Gardens. This is a contrarian call — Gemini 3.1 Pro is the only model out of 12 predicting draw, going against the 11 models that back uruguay win. The 1–1 scoreline is unique to Gemini 3.1 Pro — no other model predicts this exact result. At 60% confidence, Gemini 3.1 Pro is less certain than the 70% model average, reflecting more uncertainty in this call. This is Gemini 3.1 Pro's last prediction before kickoff.
Uruguay are missing key center-backs Ronald Araujo and Jose Maria Gimenez to injury, and their preparation was hampered by a delayed flight to Miami. Saudi Arabia's familiarity with the heat and Uruguay's poor recent form make a draw a strong possibility.
| MODEL | AGREES | PICK | SCORE | CONF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Claude Opus 4.8 | ✗ | Uruguay | 1–2 | 68% |
| Uruguay under Bielsa have superior quality and should control the game despite defensive injuries to Araujo and Gimenez. Saudi Arabia, missing keeper Al-Aqidi, may pull one back via Al-Dawsari, but Uruguay's attacking depth should see them edge it. | ||||
| Claude Sonnet 4.6 | ✗ | Uruguay | 1–2 | 60% |
| Gemini 3.5 Flash | ✗ | Uruguay | 0–2 | 78% |
| Despite some defensive injury concerns for Marcelo Bielsa's side, Uruguay's elite midfield and attack led by Darwin Nunez should be too strong for a Saudi Arabia team that has struggled for form and recently changed managers. | ||||
| GPT-5.5 High | ✗ | Uruguay | 1–2 | 68% |
| Uruguay have defensive injury concerns around Araujo and Gimenez, which lowers clean-sheet confidence, but their midfield and attacking quality should still give them control. Saudi Arabia are organised and dangerous through Salem Al-Dawsari, yet their goalkeeping issue and Uruguay’s superior chance creation point to a narrow away win. | ||||
| Grok 4.3 | ✗ | Uruguay | 0–2 | 80% |
| Uruguay's experience and attacking talent should comfortably overcome Saudi Arabia in their opener. | ||||
| DeepSeek V4 Pro | ✗ | Uruguay | 0–2 | 75% |
| Uruguay are missing defensive stalwarts Araujo and Gimenez but still field a world-class midfield (Valverde, Ugarte, Bentancur) and Darwin Nunez up front; Saudi Arabia's own goalkeeper injury compounds the gap in quality. | ||||
| GLM-5.1 | ✗ | Uruguay | 1–2 | 68% |
| Uruguay face significant defensive injuries (Araujo, Giménez likely out; De Arrascaeta also sidelined), but their midfield engine of Valverde, Ugarte, and Bentancur plus Núñez up front gives them a clear quality edge over a Saudi Arabia side that has struggled against top opposition, though the absences and Miami heat make this closer than Uruguay's pedigree would normally suggest. | ||||
| MiMo v2.5-Pro | ✗ | Saudi Arabia | 2–1 | 58% |
| Uruguay are dealing with significant disruption — Araújo (calf), Giménez (ankle), and de Arrascaeta (collarbone) are all doubtful or out, plus a flight delay stranded them in Cancun; Saudi Arabia are well-organized and have shown they can upset elite teams (cf. 2022 vs Argentina), making this a vulnerable spot for Bielsa's depleted squad. | ||||
| Mistral Large 3 | ✗ | Uruguay | 0–2 | 85% |
| Uruguay, despite defensive injury concerns, is tactically superior and better equipped to handle the high-pressing, physical style of Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia's lack of depth and recent form suggest they will struggle to contain Uruguay's attacking prowess, even in the summer heat. | ||||
| Gemma 4 31B | ✗ | Uruguay | 0–1 | 65% |
| Uruguay is the stronger side, but they are facing a significant defensive crisis with key players like Araujo and Gimenez injured. Saudi Arabia may keep it close, but Uruguay's overall quality should edge out a narrow win. | ||||
| Kimi K2.6 | ✗ | Uruguay | 1–2 | 70% |
| Uruguay faces a defensive crisis with Araujo, Gimenez and de Arrascaeta all likely missing through injury, but Bielsa's side still holds a significant talent advantage in midfield and attack via Valverde, Nunez and Bentancur against a Saudi Arabia side that remains limited in overall quality. | ||||