CD Castellón host Cádiz in LaLiga 2 on Friday evening, 15 May 2026, with the campaign reaching its sharp end and very different pressures sitting on either side of this fixture. Castellón are up in sixth and chasing promotion play-off momentum. Cádiz, down in 18th, are staring at the bottom half with a season that’s been far too flat for comfort.
For Pablo Hernández’s side, this is about holding their place in the top six and keeping the tempo high at home, where they’ve been one of the division’s sturdier outfits. For Imanol Idiakez and Cádiz, the equation is simpler and uglier: stop the slide, find some resistance, and drag themselves over the line with a bit of dignity. They’ve been winless for ages. That sort of run changes the mood around a club fast.
There’s a little narrative edge here too. Castellón have had the better of their season, but Cádiz aren’t strangers to making this awkward. The visitors have not lost in four against Castellón, and the reverse fixture in December ended 2-0 to Cádiz. Still, that was then. Right now, the current form lines point in very different directions.
CD Castellón Form & Analysis
Castellón come into this on the back of a frustrating little wobble, but it’s only a wobble. Their last six league games have mixed the good with the irritating. They went to Granada on 6 April and came away with a 3-2 win in a proper open game. Then they drew 2-2 away to Mirandés, beat Burgos 3-1 at home, and pulled off a lively 3-2 win at Málaga. After that came the stumble: a 2-1 home loss to Córdoba, followed by a 1-1 draw away to AD Ceuta last time out. That’s not bad form at all, but there’s just enough slippage to remind them this run-in isn’t going to be comfortable.
At home, though, Castellón have been strong all season. Their record at their own ground reads 12 wins, three draws and four defeats, with 39 goals scored and only 23 conceded. That’s a proper promotion-level home return. They’re not merely grinding out results either. They’ve been scoring freely, and the home numbers show a side that usually gets on the front foot early and keeps pressure on. The broader season tally is solid too: sixth place, 65 points, 66 goals scored and a positive goal difference that underlines how often they’ve found a way to hurt teams.
The recent shape of their games matters here. Castellón’s last six have all gone over 2.5 goals, and they’ve been involved in open, swinging contests rather than sterile, cagey affairs. They’ve also gone six straight league matches without a clean sheet, which is the one real concern. You can see the pattern from the Ceuta draw: they created enough to win it, with 18 shots, five on target and five big chances, but they still conceded once and had to settle for a point. That’s the trade-off with Castellón. They’ll usually give you something going forward. They don’t always shut the door.
Pablo Hernández will probably live with that. At this stage of the season, a team in the play-off places often prefers momentum over perfection. But they can’t afford to become sloppy at the back. A side that concedes in six in a row, no matter how well it attacks, is always one bad half away from dropping points. That’s the worry.
Cádiz Form & Analysis
Cádiz are in a far worse place and there’s no dressing it up. Their last six league matches have brought one draw and five defeats, and the line of results tells a brutal story. They were beaten 3-0 at Sporting Gijón on 19 April, lost 1-0 at home to FC Andorra a few days later, went down 2-1 at home to Las Palmas, drew 2-2 away at Cultural Leonesa, and then lost again at home to Deportivo La Coruña last time out. Before that, there was a 1-3 home defeat to Córdoba. Nine league matches without a win now. That’s a long, heavy run.
The away record is a little less catastrophic than the recent overall form, but it’s still not something that inspires much confidence. Cádiz have taken just 19 points on the road from 19 away matches, with four wins, seven draws and eight defeats. They’ve scored 18 and conceded 28 away from home. Those aren’t numbers of a side that travels well. They’re numbers of a team that often spends too long chasing games and too little time controlling them.
The recent performance against Deportivo summed up the problem perfectly. Cádiz had only seven shots, one on target, and just 0.27 expected goals. That’s barely a threat. They were second-best across the board, with Deportivo registering 19 shots and eight on target. When your home crowd sees that sort of output, the frustration builds quickly. Cádiz simply aren’t carrying enough punch. They’ve scored only 36 league goals all season, which is well below the level you’d expect from a side trying to climb away from trouble.
Mind you, they’re not a complete write-off on the road. Four away wins and seven draws show they can, at times, drag matches into awkward territory. They’ve also been first to concede far too often, and that’s usually a sign of a team that spends most of the evening on the back foot. Once they trail, the lack of goals becomes a serious problem. Even their 2-2 draw away to Cultural Leonesa felt more like a temporary pause than a reset. The winless streak keeps rolling, and with each passing week the confidence looks thinner.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings lean Cádiz’s way, and that does matter a little. They beat Castellón 2-0 in December 2025, drew 0-0 in February 2025, and won 3-1 in Castellón in September 2024. Go back further and the pattern still contains plenty of low-scoring tension. Cádiz are unbeaten in the last four meetings, which gives them a psychological edge, even if it’s not one you’d call overwhelming.
The broader H2H picture also points towards caution rather than chaos. Most of these games have been tight, and a low-scoring trend has shown up often enough to be respected. That’s useful context. Still, form can override history, and the current shape of both sides suggests this one won’t be played on the same script as a year or two ago.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/5 here. Castellón are exactly the kind of side that can drag Cádiz into a game they don’t want — and then leave a door open at the other end. The home side have scored in six straight league matches, while Cádiz have gone nine without a win and haven’t kept a clean sheet in that run. Put those together and BTTS is the cleanest angle on the board.
The 1-1 correct score has real appeal too. Castellón’s home record says they should get chances and likely score, but Cádiz have just enough stubbornness on the road to nick something if Castellón lose control for a spell. That said, the home side’s attacking output and Cádiz’s fragile defending should keep this from feeling one-way. A 2-1 Castellón win wouldn’t shock anyone either, but 1-1 feels the most balanced read.
If you want a slightly safer alternative, Castellón to score first is worth a look. They’ve often started on the front foot at home, while Cádiz keep conceding first. That’s a decent match-up for the hosts.