CONCACAF · Football predictions hub
CONCACAF football predictions, odds & corner stats
Live coverage of the CONCACAF Champions Cup, the top club competition for North America, Central America and the Caribbean. Corner reads on each fixture and the price across the sportsbooks we trust, with the context that explains the Liga MX dominance and the rising MLS challenge.
Quick answer
CONCACAF club football runs the Concacaf Champions Cup as its top continental competition, with 27 clubs drawn from 17 member federations across North America, Central America and the Caribbean. Liga MX (Mexico) sides have historically dominated, with MLS (United States and Canada) and Liga Profesional (Costa Rica, Honduras, Panama) sides occasionally breaking through. The competition runs from February to early June as a knockout tournament. corneredge.bet refreshes CONCACAF Champions Cup odds every hour during the rounds.
Odds update every hour
CONCACAF leagues we cover
Every CONCACAF competition with at least one upcoming match in the next two weeks. Leagues with no fixtures right now still appear if they are part of our coverage.
How corners behave in CONCACAF football
The corner angle bettors care about. What we read on each match type, and how the model adjusts for CONCACAF context.
Liga MX home matches are the standard template
The cleanest corner over template in the Concacaf Champions Cup is a Liga MX home leg against a smaller federation opponent in the round of 16. The Mexican side spends most of the match in the final third against a low block, and corners pile up. Lines on those legs are usually tight already because the market knows the template.
Two leg ties skew lower on the first leg
Knockout matches with a return leg produce lower goal and corner totals on the first leg because both sides prioritise protecting the away result. The second leg produces above baseline corner totals because the trailing side opens up. The model treats each leg independently rather than projecting an averaged total.
Altitude and heat shift the second half
CONCACAF home matches are played across a wide range of climates and altitudes. A side travelling from MLS to a high altitude Liga MX venue or to a humid Central American ground pays a measurable physical cost. Second half goal totals usually skew higher in those matchups because tired legs leave more space.
MLS rise has tightened the underdog price
Liga MX dominance has been the historical default but MLS clubs investing in deeper squads have narrowed the talent gap. Underdog prices in MLS against Liga MX ties are tighter now than they were five years ago, and the model tracks rolling form rather than projecting a static federation hierarchy.
Why CONCACAF club football is its own market
CONCACAF is the football governing body for North America, Central America and the Caribbean. The top club competition is the Concacaf Champions Cup, rebranded in 2024 from the previous Concacaf Champions League name. Twenty seven clubs from 17 federations enter, drawn from the qualifying leagues across the region: Liga MX (Mexico), MLS (United States and Canada), and smaller national leagues from Costa Rica, Honduras, Panama, El Salvador, Guatemala, Jamaica and others. The format is straight knockout, two leg ties from the round of 16 through the final.
Liga MX clubs have historically dominated the competition. Mexican sides have won the Concacaf top club competition more often than every other federation combined, and the matchups between Liga MX and MLS sides in the round of 16 and quarter finals are the highest profile betting windows of the tournament. The pricing in those ties reflects the historical Mexican dominance but the gap has narrowed in recent seasons as MLS clubs have invested in deeper squads and Designated Player contracts.
Corner and goal baselines run slightly below European mid tier averages because matches between top federation clubs and smaller federation clubs produce one sided games where the smaller side defends with a deep low block and limits chance creation entirely. The cleanest betting angles in the Concacaf Champions Cup are home favourite mismatches in the round of 16 and the under 2.5 goals lean on tight two leg ties between matched federation clubs in the later rounds.
CONCACAF football betting questions
- What is the Concacaf Champions Cup?
- The Concacaf Champions Cup is the top club competition for North America, Central America and the Caribbean, rebranded in 2024 from the previous Concacaf Champions League name. Twenty seven clubs from 17 member federations enter, drawn from the qualifying leagues across the region. The format is straight knockout, two leg ties from the round of 16 through the final.
- When is the Concacaf Champions Cup played?
- The competition runs from February through early June each year. Round of 16 and quarter finals are played February through April. Semi finals run in late April and early May. The final is played as a two leg tie in early June.
- Which league dominates the Concacaf Champions Cup?
- Liga MX (Mexico) has historically dominated the competition. Mexican sides have won the Concacaf top club competition more often than every other federation combined. MLS clubs have invested in deeper squads in recent seasons and narrowed the gap, but Liga MX remains the strongest federation by win rate.
- How do CONCACAF matches differ from UEFA matches?
- Three differences matter. Climate and altitude vary widely across CONCACAF venues, which affects second half stamina and skews late goal markets. The format is straight knockout from the round of 16, with no league phase, which makes each round higher stakes and produces lower first leg goal totals. And federation gaps are wider on average than UEFA gaps, which produces more one sided round of 16 matches.
- How many goals does a typical match produce?
- Matches average around 2.5 to 2.7 goals per match across recent editions. Slightly below the UEFA Champions League baseline but in line with most European top leagues. First legs run lower, second legs higher.
- Where can I bet on Concacaf Champions Cup matches?
- Every reviewed sportsbook at corneredge.bet covers the Concacaf Champions Cup slate, including Thunderpick, Stake, BC.Game, Sportsbet.io and Cloudbet. Sportsbet.io tends to carry the deepest live betting coverage on Liga MX matches specifically because of the South American customer mix.
- What other CONCACAF competitions exist?
- Below the Concacaf Champions Cup sit the Central American Cup (Copa Centroamericana) and the Caribbean Cup, which feed into the Champions Cup qualifying rounds. corneredge.bet does not currently price those qualifiers; coverage starts at the Champions Cup round of 16.
- How accurate is the model on CONCACAF football?
- The model uses per team rolling averages and a competition specific baseline. Sample sizes per club are smaller than in continuous leagues (a Concacaf Champions Cup run might be four to six matches total) so confidence is typically slightly below domestic league reads. The full methodology is on the methodology page.
How this page works
- Live data, every hour. The match list and odds read straight from the live market and refresh every hour.
- Per league baseline. The corner model uses a per league baseline so CONCACAF fixtures read against CONCACAF context, not a generic European setting.
- Independent rankings. No sportsbook pays for placement. Full method on the methodology page; affiliate model explained at the affiliate disclosure.
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