Eswatini arrive in poor shape, with no win in 13 matches and only two draws in their last six, so they have not given much reason to trust them to control a game. The most recent meeting with Eritrea ended in a 2-0 defeat on 25 March, and that result fits the wider pattern of Eswatini struggling to turn matches in their favour.
Eritrea come in with the confidence of that same 2-0 win, and they have already shown they can keep Eswatini quiet for long spells. Still, their edge is not overwhelming, and the projected 1.0 away xG suggests they are not being priced as a side likely to create a flood of chances on the road.
The home numbers point more clearly towards Eswatini finding a way to respond. Home teams in this competition are averaging 1.28 goals per match, while away sides are down at 0.93, and Eswatini’s overall run also includes eight straight matches without a clean sheet. That leaves room for Eritrea to threaten again, but it also supports Eswatini having enough pressure at home to tilt a tight tie.
The scoring profile is not especially one-sided either. Eswatini’s recent results have included a 2-2 draw and a 3-3 draw, while Eritrea’s latest win was secured without needing a high-scoring pattern. With the first leg already settled 2-0, a narrow home response looks more likely than a runaway scoreline, even if the xG projection hints at a competitive match rather than a dominant one.
My prediction is Home Win at 4/5. Eswatini are at home this time, Eritrea’s recent win came by only two goals at home, and the home-side benchmark in this competition is stronger than the away-side benchmark. Eswatini’s longer run of poor results does not help, but their need to respond after the first-leg defeat and the modest away attacking projection for Eritrea still point toward a home success.