Several betting lines hinge on how many corner kicks the teams produce, including match total, each team's corners, half totals, odd/even, and which side takes the first corner.
Each over/under threshold (6.5–13.5), per-team lines, half markets, and first-corner settlement decide whether bets win or lose.
Argentina's right- and left-sided attackers and full-backs create most corner chances, while Jordan's defense and compactness determine how often those attacks end in corners.
Referees, assistants, the stadium's pitch and wind, and coaching substitutions also shape corner counts by altering space and fatigue during the match.
Tactical setup, wing width, frequency of crosses, and how often teams win duels near the byline determine corner generation.
Scoreline dynamics, game tempo, substitutions, set-piece focus, shot volume, and stoppages change corner rates across halves; a team protecting a lead reduces attacking corners.
Lineups and formations announced before kickoff reveal whether full-backs or wingers are likely to deliver crosses and force corners.
Early corner counts, shot maps, halftime score, substitutions that increase flank play, weather, and any red cards are immediate signals to watch, especially in the first and last 15 minutes.