Antony Gordon is priced at US$1000 to score the first goal and just over US$400 to score anytime in Mexico vs. England. Those numbers put him in the same first-goalscorer band as Marcus Rashford, while Harry Kane sits shorter at +420 for the first goal and +160 anytime.
Harry Kane Leads the Market
The market gives Kane the clearest scoring edge, with Raul Jimenez at US$260 to score anytime and Julian Quinones at US$330 behind him. No Goalscorer is listed at +750 in the first-goal market, another option bettors must weigh against the individual scorers.
Anthony Gordon’s Two Assists
Gordon has recorded two assists in the tournament, but he has yet to score. That split explains the gap between his creation numbers and his goal pricing: he has added value without finishing chances himself, and the board still prices him as a live scorer rather than a longshot only.
He is also described as having impressed with his energy off the wing, which is the kind of role that can produce both assists and shots without guaranteeing either. For bettors, that means the market is leaning on his involvement rather than a finished scoring trend, while England supporters get a clearer read on how he is being valued against the other listed options.
Mexico vs. England Betting Board
Mexico vs. England brings several familiar names into the same prop market, but Gordon’s line is the one that stands out for the mix of opportunity and unfinished output. Marcus Rashford matches him at US$1000 for the first goal, while Kane’s shorter prices suggest the market expects more direct finishing from him than from the wider attacking options.
The practical takeaway is simple: Gordon is not priced as a top-end favorite, but he is not buried either. Anyone backing him is paying for the chance that his tournament involvement turns into a finish in a match where the board already gives bettors a full set of alternatives to compare.







