Casa Pia return to Liga Portugal Betclic action on Sunday evening looking to drag themselves clear of the danger zone when they host Tondela at the Estádio Pina Manique. It’s a straight fight at the bottom end of the table, and neither side can afford to waste points now. Casa Pia sit 16th on 26 points, only a little ahead of 17th-placed Tondela on 22. That gap isn’t healthy. Not at this stage.
For Álvaro Pacheco’s team, this is about stopping the slide and giving their home crowd something to cling to. For Gonçalo Feio’s Tondela, it’s just as stark: they need a result to keep the pressure off and perhaps pull themselves into safer water. The stakes are simple. Lose this kind of six-pointer and you’re handing the other side oxygen.
There’s also a bit of bruised pride attached to it. Casa Pia beat Tondela 2-1 in the reverse fixture on 21 December 2025, so the visitors arrive with a score to settle. Both sides have spent much of the campaign scraping for moments rather than stringing together real momentum. That’s why this feels like a tight, nervy game rather than a free-flowing one.
Casa Pia Form & Analysis
Casa Pia’s recent form has been grim in the round. They’ve gone nine matches without a win, and their last six tell a bleak little story: a 1-2 defeat at Gil Vicente on 27 April, a 0-1 home loss to Sporting Braga, a goalless draw with Santa Clara, then a 1-3 defeat away to FC Alverca, a 1-1 draw with Benfica, and a heavy 0-4 loss at CF Estrela Amadora. That’s not a sequence that inspires much confidence. It’s a team scrapping for points, but rarely putting together enough quality over 90 minutes to turn draws into wins.
The home numbers are slightly better, but only slightly. Casa Pia have taken 14 points from 15 league matches at their own ground, with two wins, eight draws and five defeats. They’ve scored 17 and conceded 24 at home, which tells you plenty. They’re awkward enough to avoid being rolled over every week, yet they don’t do enough in either box to control games. A home side with eight draws from 15 usually means one thing: they keep hanging around, but they don’t finish the job.
That pattern fits the eye test too. They’ve managed to stay competitive against stronger teams — Benfica were held to 1-1 here — but the lack of clean sheets has kept dragging them back into trouble. Only one of their last six was a win attempt that truly felt alive, and even that ended in defeat once Gil Vicente found late control. If you’re backing Casa Pia to do anything here, you’re really backing them to stay in the game long enough to nick a goal. Nothing more than that. They’re not suddenly about to become ruthless.
Tondela Form & Analysis
Tondela are in much the same mess, just with a slightly different flavour. Their last six include a 2-2 draw away to Sporting CP on 29 April, which is the kind of result that hints at fight, but it sits alongside a 0-2 home loss to CD Nacional, a 0-2 defeat at FC Porto, a 2-2 draw with Gil Vicente, a brutal 0-5 loss away to Vitória SC and a 0-0 draw with AVS at home. It’s a mixed bag, though the through-line is obvious enough: they’re tough to put away in patches, but they don’t protect themselves well enough over a full league season.
Away from home, the record is a warning sign. Tondela have picked up 12 points on the road from 15 matches, with three wins, three draws and nine defeats. They’ve scored just 12 away goals and conceded 31. That’s a heavy number. Away trips have been a real problem, because they often end up chasing the game after conceding first and then leaving too much space behind them. You don’t need to overcomplicate it. That’s been the story far too often.
Still, the draw at Sporting CP is not nothing. Coming back from that kind of fixture with a point takes some nerve, even if the match had a slightly chaotic edge, with goals at both ends and a late twist. And if you zoom out a little, Tondela have at least shown they can cling to games long enough to frustrate better sides. They’ve also gone five league matches without a clean sheet, which is hardly ideal, but it does fit the broader picture of a team that will usually give the opposition a chance. The flip side? They’re rarely out of it themselves.
Head-to-Head
There isn’t a long recent history to dig into, but the one meeting in the database matters. Casa Pia beat Tondela 2-1 on 21 December 2025, and that result will sit in the background of this return fixture. It wasn’t a rout. It was close, and that’s probably the best guide here.
One meeting does not make a pattern, but it does at least tell us the matchup can be tight. Casa Pia know they’ve already found a way through once, while Tondela know they were edged out and will feel this is a chance to answer back. That usually helps the case for a low-margin, cagey evening.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 for this one, and it’s the cleanest angle on the board. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the treble tips page pulls together treble tips if you want a middle ground between singles and full accumulators. Casa Pia have been too open at home, Tondela have been too porous away, and both sides come into the game with enough attacking output to nick one. The projected xG line is close too — Casa Pia 1.1, Tondela 0.9 — which points straight at a 1-1 kind of match.
Casa Pia haven’t won in nine, but they’ve still managed to score in enough of their recent games to keep the BTTS case alive, including against Benfica and Gil Vicente. Tondela, for their part, just came through a wild one at Sporting CP and have been finding scraps of attacking joy even in difficult away fixtures. You wouldn’t trust either defence to shut the door for 90 minutes. Not here.
A 1-1 draw feels the right call. It matches the table, the form, and the general feel of two sides who can hurt each other without ever looking likely to pull clear. If you want a small alternative, the draw itself has real appeal too, but BTTS is the stronger route given how often both teams have been leaking chances and goals.