Wanting someone to win, and thinking someone will win, are different.
Meh... technically, sure, but for the most part its just an excuse for hedging...
You only get to pick ONE (1) Team candidate!
No saying lame things to try and pick both
teams candidates so you can claim "See I was right!" or "We won!" or "I'm happy with the result" regardless of who wins... that's lame

... By all means explain/defend your pick
but don't hedge, because that's lame
Lame things people say for the Super Bowl US Presidential Election (to try to justify picking both teams candidates):
1. I WANT Team candidate X to win but I THINK Team candidate Y will win = Lame
The more meaningful question is
"Who will/did you vote for?" ... Or, in the case of folks who are not US citizens,
"Who would you vote for if you were eligible to vote in this election?"
The answer to that is all that really matters. Particularly telling for me, is when people try to dodge the question or say things like "I don't care", "I'm not in the US", "I wouldn't vote", "I wouldn't vote for either major candidate", "I'm writing someone in", etc.
It's not that any of those answers are necessarily
wrong... you have the right to vote (or not) any way you choose and you have the right to your own opinion. It's just that you get some significant insight into a person's mentality by how they answer the question of who they would vote for, regardless of how they answer.
I
want X to win, but
I think Y will win is a clear demonstration of a hedging mentality. It indicates a person who is afraid of being wrong, so they are attempting to pick both candidates so that they can tell themselves and others, that they were "right" regardless of who wins. Often, this hedging occurs subconsciously, as an ego-defense mechanism.