Israel U21 come into this qualifier with a useful edge in recent results, having won four of their last six in all competitions and avoiding defeat in their last two. The most recent away victory over Hungary U21 was a 1-0 result with decent attacking volume, and they also beat Netherlands U21 3-1 at home in this group, which is a stronger sign for a home win than a flat run of draws would be on its own.
Bosnia & Herzegovina U21 have been much harder to beat than to beat opponents themselves, with only one win in their last six and three draws in that sequence. Their last two away group matches produced a 2-0 win at Slovenia U21 and the earlier 0-0 in Israel, but their broader away scoring has not been convincing enough to make them a reliable travel side here.
The goal pattern across Bosnia’s qualification games also leans toward a tight contest, with five straight matches staying under 2.5 goals. That fits the recent head-to-head as well, since the meeting in Bosnia finished 0-0. Israel’s home win over Netherlands U21 is the best attacking outlier in the sample, but the overall shape of this fixture still points to a narrow margin rather than a wide scoreline.
Israel’s xG projection of 1.4 against Bosnia’s 1.0 supports them edging a game where neither side has been consistently prolific. Bosnia’s recent draws against Slovenia U21 and Netherlands U21 show they can frustrate opponents, but they have also failed to turn that resistance into enough points, while Israel have already taken care of stronger opposition at home in this group.
My prediction is Home Win at 115/100. Israel’s home result against Netherlands U21 stands out in this group, Bosnia have one win in their last six and have drawn too often to be trusted away, and the 0-0 head-to-head in September 2025 suggests a close game rather than an easy one. The tension is that Bosnia have been awkward to break down, but Israel’s slightly better attacking projection and more convincing recent wins give them the edge.