Granada welcome Burgos Club de Fútbol to Andalusia on Saturday evening in LaLiga 2, with the two sides arriving at very different points in the table but with the same basic need: close the season well and keep whatever objective is left in reach. Granada sit 14th on 48 points, too far away to dream about a late push up the standings and not yet safe from the kind of flat finish that drags a campaign down. Burgos are eighth on 63 points and still have a live shot at the play-off race, even if the gap above them means every slip has started to sting.
It’s a fixture that feels more about rhythm than romance. Granada have had flashes of control at home, but their season has been too uneven to trust. Burgos, by contrast, have built a tougher, more functional profile, especially away from home, where they’ve picked up more than their share of points. The first meeting between these two this season ended 1-1 in Burgos back on 22 September 2025, and that feels like a fair starting point for this rematch too. Not flashy. Competitive. Tight.
The context matters. Granada are trying to finish without a wobble, and Burgos need to stay in the frame for the upper end of the division. For both teams, this is exactly the sort of late-season game that can look simple on paper and turn awkward by half-time. One goal, maybe two. That’s the shape of it.
Granada Form & Analysis
Granada’s recent run has been messy, and that’s the polite version. Their last six league matches have brought just two wins and four defeats, and the pattern hasn’t been flattering. They beat Cultural Leonesa 1-0 at home on 12 April, then immediately got dragged into a wild 4-1 loss away to Albacete a week later. A home meeting with Almería on 26 April turned into another setback, 4-2, and their 1-0 win at Real Zaragoza on 1 May offered a brief lift before they were edged 1-0 by Córdoba away on 10 May. There’s been no real momentum. A win here, a collapse there. That’s been Granada’s spring.
The most recent loss at Córdoba summed up a lot of their season in one game. Granada were second best almost everywhere: just six shots, only two on target, no big chances at all, and an xG of 0.24. They never really threatened. Córdoba, by contrast, hammered them with 19 shots and 3 big chances, and Granada’s discipline broke down too, with Diego Percan sent off in the 80th minute. That won’t inspire much confidence. When they’re off it, they’re really off it.
At home, though, Granada have done enough to keep this from looking like a complete collapse. Their record at their ground stands at 6 wins, 8 draws and 5 losses, with 27 scored and 22 conceded. That’s not dominant, but it is steady enough. They’ve been awkward to beat at home for long spells, and the numbers point to a team that’s generally capable of keeping games in range rather than running away with them. They’re 17th in the home table, so there’s no glamour here, but there is a stubborn edge. You’d expect them to be in the contest. The question is whether they can turn that into control.
Still, Granada’s broader issue is simple: they don’t finish games strongly enough, and when they fall behind, the response isn’t always there. Their overall goal difference is only minus two across the season, which tells you they’re not miles off the pace. But they’re far too easy to push around when the tempo rises. Burgos won’t fear that.
Burgos Club de Fútbol Form & Analysis
Burgos come into this on a much sturdier run, even if the last few results haven’t exactly been glamorous. They’ve drawn three on the bounce, starting with a 1-1 home result against Deportivo La Coruña on 25 April, then two goalless stalemates in a row — away to Real Sociedad B U21 on 3 May and at home to Almería on 9 May. Before that, they lost 3-1 at CD Castellón on 18 April, but that defeat sits in the middle of a much more reliable stretch that included a 1-0 home win over Sporting Gijón and a 3-2 away victory at Albacete. They’ve been harder to beat than exciting to watch. That’s their identity.
The latest goalless draw with Almería was a good example of how Burgos operate when the game is balanced. They were involved in a proper scrap, with 20 shots apiece and a narrow xG edge at 1/10 to 0.94. It wasn’t a sterile 0-0. It was a tense one, and Burgos were in it right to the end. They’ve also been on the right side of a few close calls this season, which is why their league position still looks healthy. They’re not a side that blows teams away. They just keep showing up.
Away from home, Burgos have been excellent by Segunda standards. Their record on the road is 8 wins, 4 draws and 7 losses, with 20 goals scored and 21 conceded. That’s a proper away profile. They’ve taken points in difficult places and generally kept matches compact. Fifth in the away table tells you they travel well. Not every week, not every ground, but enough to matter. There’s no reason to believe they’ll be overawed at Granada.
The flip side? Their attack can go quiet. Burgos have only scored 44 goals in 39 league matches overall, which isn’t much for a side chasing the top end. They’re organised, disciplined and awkward, but they don’t always carry enough punch to turn pressure into wins. That’s why so many of their recent results have landed in the draw column. This could be another one of those days if Granada keep things tight.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings lean towards caution, and that’s no surprise given the nature of both teams. Burgos and Granada drew 1-1 in Burgos in September 2025, after a 0-0 draw in Granada in January 2025. Go back a little further and there was another draw in Burgos, 2-2 in September 2024, before Granada won 3-1 away in March 2023 and 1-0 at home in December 2022.
That’s five games without a defeat for Granada in this fixture, and the broader trend is clear enough: these match-ups tend to stay tight. One side rarely runs away with it. On top of that, the games have often been short on open-ended chaos. Low margins, awkward rhythms, not much daylight. This isn’t a fixture that usually gives you a free ride.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 8/15 here, and it’s the right side of the line for this game. Granada aren’t in great shape, but they’re still solid enough at home to avoid defeat more often than not, and Burgos have hit a spell of draws that makes them dangerous but not necessarily decisive. That’s the key point. They’re hard to beat, yes. They’re not always built to finish the job.
The numbers and the style point towards a narrow, cagey evening. Granada’s home record isn’t spectacular, yet it’s strong enough to protect them from a lot of second-tier opposition. Burgos have only scored 20 away goals all season, and with three draws in their last three matches, they’re carrying plenty of control but not much cutting edge. A 1-1 scoreline feels the likeliest outcome, with Granada just about doing enough to stay level or nick it late. If you wanted a more aggressive angle, under 2.5 goals has real appeal too. This one shouldn’t open up.