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Osasuna host Atlético Madrid at El Sadar on Tuesday evening, 12 May 2026, in a LaLiga meeting that still matters for both clubs, even if their targets are very different. Osasuna are trying to steady a season that has drifted into mid-table comfort, while Atlético arrive with Champions League qualification already in sight but plenty still to play for in the run-in. Fourth place brings prestige and pressure in equal measure. Drop points here and the margin for error shrinks fast.
For Osasuna, this is about finishing with purpose after a mixed spring. Alessio Lisci’s side sit 10th on 42 points, and while that’s not a disaster, it’s a long way from having anything truly secure. Atlético, managed by Diego Simeone, are fourth on 63 points and remain in the fight to protect a top-four berth. They’ve also just come out of a draining European knockout spell against Arsenal, so the question is simple: can they respond with authority on the road, or will fatigue and frustration creep in?
Osasuna’s recent form has been messy, but not dead. Their last six league matches tell a story of a team that can still compete when the game suits them, yet repeatedly leaves the door open. At Levante on 8 May they lost 3-2 in a wild, ugly contest. Sergio Herrera’s red card before half-time turned that afternoon into a scramble, and Osasuna’s numbers were brutal: 0.63 xG, 35 shots faced, 12 on target against. That wasn’t a narrow defeat. It was survival by the end.
Before that, they were beaten 2-1 at home by Barcelona, which is hardly shameful on paper, but the pattern matters more than the opponent. Barcelona came to El Sadar and got the job done. Osasuna had beaten Sevilla 2-1 in their previous home outing, though, and that result does show there’s still fight in this side when they get a foothold early. The run also includes a 1-0 loss away to Athletic Club and back-to-back draws against Real Betis and Deportivo Alavés. That’s one win in six. Not great, and not the kind of momentum you want when Atlético are coming to town.
Their home record is the reason they’re still sitting in a respectable league position. Osasuna have taken 32 points from 17 matches at El Sadar, with nine wins, five draws and only three defeats. They’ve scored 29 and conceded 20 on their own ground, which is a strong platform for a side in the bottom half of the table. There’s a toughness to that record. They don’t roll over easily in Pamplona. Still, there’s a nagging issue here: they’ve gone six league games without a clean sheet, and if you hand Atlético enough chances, they usually punish you.
The other concern is defensive control. Osasuna’s home numbers are decent, but the recent 3-2 loss at Levante exposed how quickly things unravel when they’re stretched. They’re not built to chase games. If Atlético score first, Lisci’s side will need a big dose of control and composure to get anything out of this.
Atlético’s recent run has been a bit more complicated than the league table suggests. They’ve still got the points total of a side that has mostly done things properly this season, but the last week has not been smooth. A 1-0 home loss to Celta Vigo on 9 May was a poor result, especially after they’d controlled huge parts of the game without making it count. The numbers were actually strong — 21 shots, 2.04 xG, four big chances — and that’s the problem. They created enough to win and still walked away empty-handed.
That defeat came on the back of a punishing Champions League tie with Arsenal, and that’s worth keeping in mind. Atlético lost 1-0 away in London on 5 May after drawing 1-1 at home a week earlier. Their European journey was intense rather than glamorous, and that kind of knockout football takes something out of a squad. It’s one thing to be physically ready for the next league match. It’s another to be mentally sharp after a tie that drains you to the last minute. Simeone will know that better than anyone.
The league form away from home is decent but hardly dominant. Atlético have won five, drawn five and lost seven on the road, scoring 20 and conceding 21. That’s a pretty ordinary away record for a team chasing the top four. They can absolutely hurt opponents, as shown by the 2-0 win at Valencia on 2 May, but they don’t always bring the same edge away from home that they do at the Metropolitano. Before Valencia, they beat Athletic Club 3-2 at home, and earlier they lost 3-2 at Elche. That’s been the pattern for much of the spring: capable of producing enough quality to win, but not always clean enough to do it with comfort.
Simeone’s side remain a hard team to break down when they’re properly set, though the Celta match showed how fragile a missed chance count can become. They had the ball, they had the territory, and they still lost. The flip side? They’ve only conceded 38 league goals all season, which is still a sound defensive base. On paper, that suggests control. On the road, it has been less certain. Can they impose that control in Pamplona? That’s the key question.
This fixture has had a fairly predictable edge to it in recent seasons, with Atlético generally finding ways to handle Osasuna. The last meeting ended 1-0 to Atlético Madrid in October 2025, and there have been plenty of low-scoring contests in this matchup over the years. Osasuna did beat Atlético 2-0 at home in May 2025 and famously won 4-1 in Madrid in May 2024, so this isn’t a one-way street. Far from it.
Even so, the wider pattern leans toward tight games. Four of the last five league meetings have finished under 2.5 goals, and that matters here. These sides usually don’t produce chaos for chaos’ sake. They often cancel each other out, then one moment decides it.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/6 for this one. 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. Osasuna have been on a six-match run without a clean sheet, and Atlético’s recent away league games have had enough chances at both ends to keep this market alive. Even in defeat, Simeone’s side are usually good for one spell where they get on top, and Osasuna have enough home threat — 29 goals at El Sadar this season — to land a punch of their own.
The projected 1-1 scoreline fits the mood of this fixture. Atlético are still the stronger side, but their away record isn’t sharp enough to trust them to shut Osasuna out, especially after the emotional and physical noise of the Arsenal tie and then that flat defeat to Celta. A narrow, tense draw feels more likely than a clean away win. If you want a second angle, under 2.5 goals has a decent case too, but BTTS feels the cleaner call here.
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