
Whether England vs Argentina produces at least seven, eight, nine, ten or eleven total corner kicks by either side.
The counted corners at the final whistle determine which threshold outcome resolves true and indicate how often the game is played toward the byline and into set-piece situations.
England and Argentina's starting lineups set the immediate corner profile through choices of wingers, attacking fullbacks, and target forwards.
Managers Gareth Southgate and Lionel Scaloni, substitute patterns, and the match referee's tendency to award corners all steer how many corners accumulate.
Attacking intent, possession share, wing play and the number of crosses and shots that are blocked or deflected directly create corner opportunities.
Game state—an early goal, tactical shifts, red cards—plus weather, pitch size, and referee interpretations change how frequently play ends in corners.
Starting XIs, stated formations, and whether both teams press high or attack from wide areas will show early corner tempo.
Monitor cross and shot counts, substitution timing, cards, and the final 15 minutes; also watch how often attackers win duels near the goal line.