Haiti arrive with one of the tournament’s most emotional stories. Their qualification was achieved in difficult circumstances, with home matches played abroad and Sébastien Migné building a competitive squad from distance. That gives their campaign a raw, human quality, but sentiment alone rarely survives World Cup pressure.
Scotland come in with a very different kind of weight on their shoulders. The Tartan Army are tired of brave exits and group-stage frustration. Steve Clarke has created a side that knows its shape, trusts its senior players and can hurt opponents through midfield runners, wide delivery and direct forward play.
Tactically, both sides are expected to start in a 4-4-2, which could make the midfield battle feel old-school and fairly physical. Haiti may try to stay compact, protect central spaces and spring forward quickly. Scotland should look to pin the full-backs deep and move the ball into crossing zones early.
The match rhythm could tilt toward Scotland if they win second balls and force Haiti to defend repeated phases. Even so, Haiti’s speed in transition is not something to wave away. Their recent attacking improvement suggests they can create moments, especially when games become stretched and emotional.
This is why the opening goal matters so much. If Haiti strike first, the night gets messy in a hurry. If Scotland score first, they can lean into game management, experience and tournament discipline. That scenario feels more likely, even if the occasion itself may be anything but calm.