India U20 go into this Group C meeting off the back of a 6-0 defeat to Japan U20 on 2 April, a result that left them still searching for their first win in the sample. They have now gone one game without a victory and have not kept a clean sheet in their recent run, so there is little in the numbers to suggest they can simply shut Australia out.
Australia U20 arrive with far better momentum after a 5-0 win over Chinese Taipei U20 on 2 April, when they put 11 shots on target and scored five times. They have won six of their last seven recorded matches in this competition and across that stretch they have also kept five clean sheets, which is a strong base for any match result call.
That said, the projected scoreline is not one-sided. The xG model gives India U20 1.5 and Australia U20 0.9, so there is some tension between the recent results and the expectation that the home side can stay competitive. Even so, Australia’s habit of scoring first in five of their last six and going in as first-half winners in four of five points to a side that usually controls these games early.
India’s best route is to make the contest messy and force a closer finish, because Australia have not been completely immune to setbacks, with three losses in their last four away or neutral losses across the wider sample. But the more persuasive trend remains Australia’s defensive control, while India’s heavy defeat to Japan underlines how fragile they can look against strong opposition. A 2-1 type game is possible, yet the bigger body of evidence still leans away from the hosts.
My prediction is Home Win at 40/1. India’s recent 6-0 loss leaves them without much momentum, while Australia have won six of their last seven and kept five clean sheets in that run. Their stronger scoring pattern, plus the fact they have been first to score in five of their last six, supports a home side success in what should still be a competitive game.