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Benfica welcome Sporting Braga to the Estádio da Luz on Monday evening in Liga Portugal Betclic, with the title race’s chasing pack and European places both hanging in the balance. José Mourinho’s side sit second on 76 points and have still not lost a league match all season. That’s the headline. They’ve built a campaign on control, clean edges and a habit of finding a way when games tighten up late on.
Braga arrive in fourth on 57 points, a respectable haul but one that leaves them looking over their shoulder more than they’d like. Carlos Vicens’ team are still in the hunt for a strong finish, but this is a brutal assignment after a draining Europa League tie with SC Freiburg. They reached the knockout stage and even won the first leg 2-1 at home, but Thursday’s 3-1 defeat in Germany was a reminder of how quickly the margins can swing when they’re under pressure. Now they face a Benfica side that almost never gifts anything away in Lisbon. That won’t be easy.
There’s also a different kind of tension here. Benfica have been relentless at home, while Braga have been a decent away side by league standards. The clash is simple enough on paper: the hosts want to keep their unbeaten run alive and stay firmly in control of their league position, while the visitors are trying to avoid a flat post-Europe performance against one of the division’s most ruthless teams.
Benfica’s recent league form has the feel of a side that rarely panics, even when the script gets messy. They drew 2-2 away to Famalicão on 2 May, and that result was a little more chaotic than they’d like. José Mourinho’s men led early through Andreas Schjelderup’s penalty and Richard Ríos’ finish, but a red card for Nicolás Otamendi changed the mood of the game and Famalicão forced their way back in. The raw scoreline flattered the chaos. Benfica’s xG of 0.50 to 1.58 against them told a sharper story. It wasn’t their cleanest outing.
Strip that away and the broader picture is still very strong. Before that draw, Benfica beat Moreirense 4-1 at home, went away to Sporting CP and came back with a 2-1 win, then handled CD Nacional 2-0 in Lisbon. They’d already drawn at Casa Pia and beaten Vitória SC 3-0 at home. That’s four wins and two draws in their last six league matches, and it stretches into a longer unbeaten run in the league that now sits at nine. They don’t surrender much. They don’t need to.
At the Luz, the numbers are even more persuasive. Benfica’s home record in the league reads 11 wins, five draws and no losses, with 39 scored and only 11 conceded. That’s proper championship-level stuff. They’ve been particularly steady in the first half of games, often getting on the front foot early and making opponents chase. You’d expect them to score, and usually that expectation is rewarded. The one caveat is that their last home league outing against Moreirense was the kind of open, high-scoring match that Braga can drag teams into. So the visitors won’t go quietly.
Still, Benfica’s biggest strength is obvious: they control games in a way that limits the opponent’s best moments. Even in the draw at Famalicão, they created enough early to lead twice. At home, they’re usually far cleaner than that. If they find their usual rhythm, Braga will spend long stretches without the ball and without much encouragement.
Braga come into this one in a more fragile state, even if the surface numbers still look decent. Their last league result was a 1-1 home draw with Estoril Praia on 3 May, a game that summed up the problem with their recent domestic stretch. They’ve had enough of the ball, enough moments, but not enough sharpness to turn that into control. Before that, they lost 2-1 away to Santa Clara, beat Casa Pia 1-0 away, and drew 2-2 with Famalicão at home. The pattern is clear enough. They’re not collapsing, but they’re not stringing together the kind of consistent league run that Benfica have made routine.
The Europa League tie with SC Freiburg has also taken a toll. Braga beat Freiburg 2-1 at home on 30 April, a result that gave them a proper lift, but the return leg on 7 May ended in a 3-1 defeat away in Germany. The match was complicated by an early red card for Mario Dorgeles, and from there Braga were always behind the curve. They still produced 1.41 xG in the game and landed three big chances, which tells you they weren’t completely overrun. But the defensive side of it was rough. Freiburg got too much space, and Braga paid for it.
Away from home in the league, Braga’s record is respectable: eight wins, four draws and four losses, with 28 scored and 16 conceded. That’s the profile of a side that can travel well enough to compete, but not one that reliably locks games down. They’ve taken points at places where lesser teams tend to fold, and that matters. Mind you, Benfica are a different test entirely. Braga’s recent habit of both scoring and conceding on the road is exactly why this trip feels awkward. They can threaten. They can also leave gaps.
The attack isn’t the issue so much as the balance. Braga usually find chances, and they’ve scored in plenty of their away games. But when the tempo rises, they’ve been too easy to open up. Against a Benfica side with a 39-11 home goal difference, that’s a bad habit to bring into Lisbon.
This fixture has thrown up plenty of goals and enough drama to keep both fanbases interested. The most recent meeting came on 7 January 2026 in the Taça da Liga, when Braga beat Benfica 3-1. A week earlier, the sides had drawn 2-2 in Braga in the league, which fits the broader feel of this matchup: there’s often life in it, and clean sheets are rare. Go back a little further and the pattern deepens. Benfica won 1-0 in the Taça de Portugal in February 2025, but Braga had already beaten them 2-1 in the league that January.
The strongest trend is simple. These meetings usually produce goals. Six of the last eight have gone over 2.5, and both teams have scored in six of the eight as well. Benfica haven’t kept a clean sheet against Braga in recent meetings, and Braga have gone even longer without shutting Benfica out. That matters here. It’s hard to picture a dull, cagey 0-0 when these two meet, even if Benfica remain the more reliable side overall.
We’re backing Benfica to win at 2/5 here. If you want a few more angles around accumulator tips, our accumulator tips page pulls together accumulator tips if you want to turn similar reads into a stronger combo ticket. It’s short, but it’s still the right call. Their home record is spotless, their league season has been absurdly consistent, and Braga arrive after a tiring European trip that ended in defeat. That combination usually points in one direction. Benfica don’t need to be brilliant to get this done. They just need to be themselves.
The 2-1 correct score looks the likeliest outcome. Braga have enough about them to nick a goal — their away record and the recent head-to-heads both say they’ll create something — but Benfica’s control at the Luz should tell over 90 minutes. If you want a slightly fuller angle, Benfica to win and both teams to score has a decent case too. Braga can land a punch. Benfica should land more than one.
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