In Group F terms, this feels like the match that tells us whether early impressions were noise or a warning. Netherlands have control, structure and tournament experience, while Sweden arrive with a louder attacking statement and a chance to tilt the group their way.
Koeman’s side are usually happiest when the midfield triangle slows the game, then releases runners into the half-spaces. The issue is concentration. They looked polished for long stretches in the opener, but the back line still gave away momentum when the match became emotional.
Sweden’s rhythm is different. Potter’s side can look compact one minute and suddenly flood forward the next, with wing-backs pushing high and the two strikers dragging defenders into ugly choices. It’s not always smooth, but it has teeth.
Corners and set pieces may quietly decide the mood. The Dutch have obvious aerial authority, yet Sweden’s forwards attack second balls with real hunger. Cards could also become a factor if transitions keep pulling midfielders into recovery fouls.
The likely rhythm points toward spells of Dutch possession, Swedish counters and a final half-hour that refuses to settle. Would either manager truly accept a dull draw here? Probably not, especially with qualification pressure already sitting on both benches.