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Both Teams To Score is easy to see from Hungary’s recent scoring pattern. They have scored in five of their last six matches, and four of those games also saw them concede, including 2-3 defeats to Ireland and Portugal plus a 2-2 draw away to Portugal. Even with the 1-0 friendly win over Slovenia on 28 March, their wider run still leans toward matches where they contribute going forward but do not fully shut games down.
The main concern for this market comes from Greece, because they were blanked in two of their last three, drawing 0-0 with Belarus and losing 1-0 to Paraguay. Even so, their qualifying games before that were much more open: they beat Scotland 3-2, then lost 3-1 away to Denmark and 3-1 away to Scotland. That gives a stronger case that Greece can score here than their latest friendly alone suggests.
The xG projection points toward goals at both ends rather than a one-sided result. Hungary are projected at 1.2 xG and Greece at 1.8, which is a healthy enough attacking baseline for both teams to find one goal. The correct-score call of 1-1 also lines up neatly with the BTTS angle, even if Greece’s recent blanks mean it is not completely risk-free.
One supporting angle is the recent head-to-head record. Four of the last five meetings between these sides produced goals for both teams, including Hungary’s 2-1 friendly win in November 2022 and the 4-3 qualifier in October 2015. That is not enough on its own, but it does fit the broader picture of this pairing often avoiding a clean-sheet outcome.
My prediction is Both Teams To Score at 1.80. Hungary have scored in five of their last six matches, Greece’s last three competitive qualifiers all saw them score, and the xG projection gives both sides at least 1.2 expected goals. The 1-1 correct-score lean also supports this market directly.