Colombia should control the game through a **4-2-3-1** built around Luis Díaz’s left-side threat, Luis Suárez’s depth runs, and a midfield double pivot that can pin Uzbekistan back for long spells. Uzbekistan’s best path is the opposite: a **compact low block** and quick vertical breaks through Shomurodov, Fayzullaev, and Iskanderov, trying to turn any Colombian overcommitment into transitional chances. The key battle is Colombia’s wide pressure versus Uzbekistan’s ability to survive central congestion without losing Shomurodov as an outlet. If Colombia’s fullbacks and wingers can isolate Uzbekistan early and keep the ball in the final third, the favorite’s attacking volume should tell; if Uzbekistan can slow the tempo, win second balls, and make it a set-piece/transition game, the upset window opens. The market reading fits that setup: Colombia are a clear favorite at **68% no-vig**, with Uzbekistan at **12%** and the draw at **20%**, so the deciding factor is whether Colombia convert territory into an early lead or get dragged into a slower, lower-event match.