Uruguay and Spain meet in a Group H decider at the 2026 FIFA World Cup on 27 June at Estadio Akron in Guadalajara, with both sides needing at least a point to advance and Cape Verde waiting to capitalise on any slip.
Marcelo Bielsa and Luis de la Fuente have never faced each other as managers. Bielsa's high pressing approach will immediately test the patient, possession-based game that brought de la Fuente the Euro 2024 title (forcing Spain to play quickly under pressure rather than dictating tempo on their own terms) and that collision is the tactical thread that runs through everything about this fixture.

Uruguay's recent history under Bielsa is uneven: a strong start included wins over Argentina and Brazil but the side then went one win in twelve, capped by a heavy friendly loss to the United States. Form improved in 2026 with draws against England and Algeria before they took two points from their opening two group matches. Spain have been steadier with Lamine Yamal sharp in both group fixtures and directly involved in the win over Saudi Arabia and the European champions arrive here as favourites - their squad is deeper at every position and they have not been stretched yet in the group.
Bielsa has built his side around Federico Valverde's energy in midfield, José María Giménez's organisation of the defensive line and Darwin Núñez running in behind, while Spain have Pedri and Yamal available with no significant absences to report.
Uruguay will press from a 4-3-3 with Valverde pushing hard onto Spain's midfielders to disrupt their build up early while Giménez organises the defensive block behind him. Spain will try to play through the press, using Yamal's movement down the right and Pedri's reading of the game to drop between Uruguay's midfield three and back four when the press breaks down. How long Uruguay can sustain that intensity will be a bigger factor than most previews acknowledge, because Bielsa's teams have historically run out of steam against opponents who can recycle possession quickly under pressure and Spain are exactly that.

These two have met infrequently at senior level and the historical record does not point anywhere useful. Uruguay will need Valverde's press to work for longer than 60 minutes - historically the point where Bielsa's intensity drops - and their aerial presence from corners offers another route, with Giménez leading a back line that wins headers. The Guadalajara altitude and an evening kick off may take a toll on stamina pushing this towards a game where Uruguay's shape holds for long stretches and the decisive moments arrive late.
Spain's ability to recycle possession quickly should force Uruguay into a second press they may not have the legs for even if that takes until the second half - Spain to edge it 2-1.

Ryan Baldi
Football Writer
Ryan Baldi is a professional football writer with years of experience and has been featured by respected outlets such as the BBC, The Guardian, Sky Sports, DAZN, FourFourTwo, ESPN, Yahoo Sport and Football365. He has also written several books including Arsène Who?.
