✅ Confirmed Lineups & What They Mean · Officially confirmed · Both XIs + comparison + tactical revision
Both sides officially announced (Uruguay FA @Uruguay & Saudi FA @SaudiNT_EN official posts, mirrored live by 101GreatGoals / Bolavip) — ✅ officially confirmed
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia Confirmed XI (back five · 5-3-2 / 3-5-2)
Al-Owais; Al-Amri · Al-Tambakti · Abdulhamid · Al-Harbi · Abu Al-Shamat; Al-Khaibari · Kanno · Al-Juwayr; Al-Buraikan · S.Al-Dawsari(C)
Key bench options: Mandash (creative midfielder — a popular pick who did NOT start) · Saleh Al-Shehri / Abdullah Al-Hamdan (backup forwards) · Al-Ghannam · Al-Aqidi (fit-again keeper, still on the bench)
🇺🇾 Uruguay Confirmed XI (4-4-2)
Muslera; Cáceres · Varela · Olivera · Viña; Ugarte · Bentancur · Valverde(C) · M.Araujo; Núñez · Viñas
Key bench options: J.Giménez (first-choice CB, ankle — only on the bench) · Rochet (backup GK) · De la Cruz · Pellistri · Canobbio · Sanabria. Out of squad: R.Araujo (calf), De Arrascaeta (calf); Suárez not called up.
vs Predicted XI — comparison
| Change | Predicted | Official | Why it matters |
| KSA · shape | 4-2-3-1 (attacking) | 5-3-2 back five (Abu Al-Shamat added) | Donis (only ~7 weeks in charge) sets up clearly defensive, abandoning the attacking shape to compress Uruguay's central space and counter via the front two |
| KSA · midfield/attack | Mandash / N.Al-Dawsari / Al-Ghannam start | All three benched; Al-Khaibari starts | Sacrifices creativity for ball-winning and defensive numbers — reinforces the low-block intent |
| KSA · Salem | Attacking midfielder | Second striker (paired with Al-Buraikan) | Salem pushed up as the outlet for counters; remains the set-piece taker |
| KSA · GK | Al-Aqidi injured, replacement TBC | Al-Owais starts | As this page anticipated — no surprise |
| URU · R.Araujo | Listed with "?" / possible starter | Out of squad (calf) | The "CB crisis" storyline lands — the biggest worry is confirmed |
| URU · Giménez | Doubtful | Bench (ankle) | Both first-choice CBs miss the XI; the back line is reorganized |
| URU · backline cover | Sanabria + R.Araujo | Cáceres (passed a head-knock) + Olivera filling in at CB; Viña (muscle, passed fit) starts | Makeshift CB pairing short on experience/chemistry — turns and cover are the soft spot |
| URU · GK | Muslera | Muslera confirmed (media had floated Rochet) | Matches this page's prediction — GK question settled |
| URU · mid/attack | Valverde/Bentancur/Ugarte/M.Araujo + Núñez/Viñas | 11/11 as predicted | Plan A executed — no change ahead of the back line |
Tactical read
① Shape signal Saudi switch to a back five
Saudi Arabia turned the predicted 4-2-3-1 into a back five (Abu Al-Shamat into the line, Mandash and N.Al-Dawsari both benched). With Donis only ~7 weeks in charge, this is the low-risk "stay solid, counter through Salem/Al-Buraikan" plan — the snapshot conclusion of "Saudi sit deep and look to spring an upset" is
reinforced (held).
② Key matchup Uruguay's makeshift CBs vs Núñez
Uruguay start without both first-choice CBs — R.Araujo (out of squad) and Giménez (bench) — with Cáceres (just off a head-knock) and natural left-back Olivera filling in. Núñez's pace and aerial threat target that line directly, but with Saudi packing five at the back and limited counter numbers, the pressure on Uruguay's CBs comes more in transition turns than sustained siege.
③ Midfield battle cutting the line into Valverde
Saudi bring in the more combative Al-Khaibari and drop the creative Mandash to block passing lanes into Valverde and disrupt Uruguay's central build-up, forcing them wider (the M.Araujo / Varela flank).
④ Snapshot revision attacking/BTTS → low openness
The original "BTTS window / open end-to-end" lean should be
downgraded: with Saudi in a back five for safety, this is more likely a "Uruguay dominate possession + Saudi park the bus" low-openness game, with goals more likely from set pieces or Uruguay breaking down a packed block than from a shootout.
⑤ Bottom line
The core read — "Uruguay superior and dominant; Saudi counter through Salem chasing an upset" —
holds; but the "open / BTTS" tone is
revised to "low openness, Uruguay control vs Saudi defend," with the caveat to watch Uruguay's makeshift CBs in quick transitions.
Market reaction: no independent post-lineup odds movement was captured at run time (only reported when available). Structurally, a Saudi back five typically nudges toward Under / lower goal expectations, but this is a structural inference, not a confirmed line move — refer to the actual market; not betting advice.