Tunisia come into this finale carrying the bruises of a campaign that never really settled. The coaching change brought energy on paper, sure, but not much fluency on the pitch. Their main challenge now is psychological as much as tactical.
Netherlands look like a side growing into the tournament at the right time. Ronald Koeman has attacking options, a settled midfield base and enough defensive authority to control long spells. Still, their draw with Japan hinted that concentration can wobble.
The likely rhythm feels fairly clear. Tunisia will try to stay compact, slow the early storm and rely on midfield bite from Ellyes Skhiri and Hannibal Mejbri. The question is whether they can hold that shape once Dutch width starts pulling them side to side.
Oranje should have the territorial edge, especially if Dumfries keeps arriving high and Gakpo receives early service between full-back and centre-back. That combination can make games feel stretched, and against a tired back line, the pressure usually builds rather than fades.
There is still a trap here, because Tunisia have pride to protect and nothing to lose. But football often turns on mood, and the Dutch mood is much healthier. If the match opens up after the first goal, it could become a long night for Renard’s men.