Córdoba welcome Sporting Gijón to El Arcángel on Sunday afternoon in LaLiga 2, and the table says this is a meeting between two sides separated by only a point. Córdoba sit 11th on 51, Sporting are 10th on 52, and neither club is completely out of the picture when it comes to pushing up the division in the closing weeks. That doesn’t mean promotion pressure in the classic sense, but it does mean pride, momentum and position all matter. No one wants to drift out of the top half with a limp finish.
There’s a familiar edge to it too. These two have been through plenty of tight, awkward meetings over the years, and this season’s first clash ended with Sporting edging a 2-1 win in Gijón. Córdoba have the home advantage, though, and they’ll feel this is a proper chance to flip that script. Their recent run has been lively, their home form is respectable rather than dominant, and Sporting arrive with one of the division’s weaker away records. Goals feel likely. A draw wouldn’t shock anyone either.
The more you look at it, the more this feels like a game where both sides can get on the scoresheet without either really taking control for long. Córdoba have been scoring regularly, Sporting have found enough going forward to stay dangerous, and neither defensive unit has built much trust over the season. That’s the angle. That’s where the value sits.
Córdoba Form & Analysis
Córdoba’s recent form has been noisy in the best possible way. They went to Cultural Leonesa on 18 April and came away with a 2-1 win, but that wasn’t a clean, polished away performance. It was a match where they had to ride some pressure, lean on their moments and keep going until the final whistle. A week earlier, they’d beaten Real Zaragoza 1-0 at home, a more controlled result that showed they can lock things down when needed. Before that came the 3-1 win at Cádiz on 4 April, another reminder that they’re not short of threat when the game opens up.
The wobble in that sequence came at Deportivo La Coruña on 31 March, where they lost 2-0, and that defeat still feels like the clearest sign of their limits. They also drew 2-2 with Mirandés at home, a match they should probably have managed better, and the 4-0 loss at Burgos earlier in the run was a proper hammering. Still, three wins from their last six is a decent return. Not perfect. But decent. They’ve scored in five of those six games, and there’s a clear sense that Iván Ania’s side can hurt teams if the tempo rises and the spaces open up.
At home, Córdoba have been steady rather than spectacular. Their record at El Arcángel stands at seven wins, four draws and six defeats, with 22 goals scored and 23 conceded. That’s the sort of split that tells you they’re comfortable enough in front of their own crowd without being especially reliable. You wouldn’t call them fortress-like. Far from it. Yet they’re rarely passive there, and their willingness to play forward has at least kept them in most matches. The last home outing, that 1-0 win over Zaragoza, fit the pattern: compact, competitive, and just about controlled.
The bigger issue is the back line. Córdoba’s league total of 53 goals conceded is a bit too generous for a side with top-half ambitions, and the home numbers aren’t airtight either. They’ve got enough attacking habit to make BTTS-friendly games common, but not enough defensive certainty to shut opponents out for long spells. That’s why this one feels like a proper coin-flip on the result and a much cleaner case for goals at both ends.
Sporting Gijón Form & Analysis
Sporting Gijón arrive with a form line that’s just as uneven, but their last outing will have lifted the mood. On 19 April they swept Cádiz aside 3-0 at home, and that wasn’t just a win — it was a statement of control. Jonathan Dubasin struck twice, Juan Otero set the tone, and Sporting looked sharp in both boxes. The xG numbers from that game were strong too, 1.87 to 0.38, so it wasn’t a fluke or a smash-and-grab. They earned it.
The problem is the away picture remains grim. Before Cádiz, they lost 1-0 at Burgos on 11 April, another sterile afternoon on the road. Earlier in April they had beaten Real Sociedad B 1-0 at home, then lost 3-1 at Real Racing Club, and before that drew 1-1 with Deportivo at home. Go back a little further and there’s the 1-0 defeat at Las Palmas on 22 March. That’s a lot of frustration away from home, and not much comfort in the pattern. Sporting have been trying to keep games tight on their travels, but they’re not turning that into results.
Their away record is one of the weakest in the division: five wins, one draw and 11 defeats, with 17 goals scored and 25 conceded. Eighteen in the away table is not where a club of Sporting’s size wants to be, even in a second tier that can flatten reputations. They’ve scored less than a goal a game on the road, and that’s the biggest warning sign here. If they fall behind, they don’t always have the tools to force their way back. That said, they’ve got just enough quality to nick chances, and Córdoba’s home defence isn’t strong enough to assume a clean sheet.
Borja Jiménez will know the assignment is simple enough: keep the contest alive, stay compact, and hope the front players can make the most of the few openings they get. They’ve done that in patches. They just haven’t done it often enough away from home. Three points in Gijón have been hard work all year. Sunday looks no different.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings between these sides have been pretty even, and the last few have followed a familiar pattern of tight margins. Sporting beat Córdoba 2-1 in Gijón in August 2025, Córdoba drew 1-1 at home against them in March 2025, and Sporting also won 2-0 in the earlier meeting in December 2024. Go back through the archive and the balance remains fairly competitive, with both clubs landing blows over the years.
The one trend worth keeping an eye on is Sporting’s habit of avoiding defeat in this fixture. They’ve gone five meetings without losing to Córdoba, which gives them a small psychological edge. Still, Córdoba did hold them to that 1-1 draw on home soil last season, and that’s the kind of result they’ll be chasing again here.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 4/7 is the pick, and it’s a fair price for a match that should have goals at both ends. Córdoba have found the net in five of their last six, Sporting just put three past Cádiz, and neither side has a defensive record that screams control. Córdoba’s home return of 22 scored and 23 conceded is bang in line with a BTTS angle, while Sporting’s away figures — 17 scored, 25 conceded — only strengthen the case. This isn’t a game where one clean sheet feels likely.
A 1-1 draw is the cleanest read. Córdoba have enough at home to compete, Sporting have enough quality to threaten, and both teams are carrying just enough flaws to cancel out a clear winner. If you wanted a small alternative, the draw itself appeals more than the match result markets, but BTTS is the stronger shout. That’s the one to land on.