Real Madrid welcome Real Oviedo to the Santiago Bernabéu on Thursday evening in LaLiga, with the home side still trying to keep pace at the top end of the table and the visitors fighting to drag themselves clear of the drop zone. For Real Madrid, second place and 77 points tell you this isn’t a season of survival — it’s one of pressure, expectation and a title race they can’t afford to let drift. For Oviedo, 20th place and just 29 points leave the picture far uglier. They’re in trouble, and every point now feels like a small rescue mission.
There’s a bit of weight on both sides here, just for very different reasons. Álvaro Arbeloa’s Madrid have the stronger squad, the stronger record and the stronger numbers at home. They’ve won 14 of 17 league games at the Bernabéu and have scored 39 while conceding only 14 there. That’s serious home muscle. Oviedo, under Guillermo Almada, arrive with the second-worst away record in the division and only two league wins on the road all season. That won’t calm anybody.
Madrid also come into this after the emotional bruise of a 2-0 defeat at Barcelona on 10 May, a game in which they never really found rhythm. Before that, though, they had beaten Espanyol away and edged Deportivo Alavés at home, and there’s no sense that one bad night changes the basic shape of their season. Oviedo’s recent path has been shakier. They drew at home to Getafe, lost heavily at Real Betis, dropped points against Elche and Villarreal, then had to settle for a goalless stalemate with ten-man discipline and little attacking punch. It’s a long way from comfortable.
Real Madrid Form & Analysis
Madrid’s last few weeks have looked like a team doing enough to stay in the fight, but not always enough to kill games off cleanly. The 2-0 loss at Barcelona was a setback, yes, but it came after a 2-0 win at Espanyol and a 2-1 home victory over Deportivo Alavés. Sandwiched between those was a 1-1 draw at Real Betis, while the 4-3 Champions League defeat at Bayern München showed the same thing that often follows Madrid around this season — they can create danger and score, but they can also leave gaps if the game becomes chaotic. The 1-1 draw with Girona at home earlier in April belongs in that same file.
At the Bernabéu, though, the picture is much cleaner. Madrid’s home record of 14 wins, one draw and two defeats is the kind of return that should make visiting teams feel uneasy before kick-off. They’ve scored 39 home league goals and conceded only 14, which is a proper elite split. You don’t need to dress it up. They’re hard to live with there. The pressure is constant, the territory is theirs, and opponents usually spend long stretches just trying to survive the waves.
What stands out most is the balance of threat and control. Madrid have scored in bursts, they’ve got the kind of attacking volume that keeps the ball in your box, and they usually get the first serious chance of the match. There’s also a clear recent pattern of them starting fast enough to force the issue. They’ve been first to score in five of their last six league games overall, and that matters in a fixture like this. If they land the first punch, Oviedo will have to open up. That is rarely a good idea against Madrid at home. Rarely.
Mind you, they’re not watertight. The away defeat to Barcelona and the four goals they let in at Bayern show that when the tempo rises, they can be dragged into a more open game than they’d like. That’s one reason this shouldn’t be viewed as a pure shutout script. Madrid are strong enough to control the match, but they’re not always so polished that the opponent is completely shut out of the scoring. That little flaw matters for the total goals angle too.
Real Oviedo Form & Analysis
Oviedo come to Madrid with the sort of form that asks awkward questions. Their most recent outing was a 0-0 draw at home to Getafe, and it was a scrappy, ugly evening that said plenty about where they are right now. They had just 0.29 xG, took only seven shots and, after Javi López and Kwasi Sibo were both sent off, they spent much of the night hanging on. Before that came a 3-0 defeat at Real Betis, a home loss to Elche, and a 1-1 draw with Villarreal. It’s been a sequence full of strain. Even the positive moments feel a bit distant now.
Their better days this spring are still worth remembering, though. Oviedo won 3-0 at Celta Vigo and beat Sevilla 1-0 at home back in April, which tells you they’re not a complete write-off when the game suits them. They can be compact, they can spring forward, and on the right day they’ve shown enough defensive organisation to stay alive. But that’s the catch — the right day is rare, and away from home the margins are brutal.
Their away record is poor enough to set alarms ringing. Two wins, four draws and 11 defeats from 17 league trips is relegation-zone stuff, and the scoring output is thin too: only 17 away goals, with 37 conceded. That’s not the profile of a side that travels well or handles sustained pressure. They’re regularly asking their back line to do too much, and when the first goal goes against them, the whole match usually shifts against them as well.
There is a small, stubborn angle that keeps them alive in games, and that’s the ability to make things awkward for a spell. They’ve drawn enough matches to suggest they won’t always collapse on contact, and they’re coming into this on the back of a goalless draw rather than a full-blown battering. Still, the concern is obvious. Madrid at the Bernabéu are a different beast from the teams Oviedo have recently managed to irritate. If Oviedo sit too deep, they’ll get pinned. If they step up, they may get cut open. That’s the trap.
Head-to-Head
There’s a clear recent reference point here, and it isn’t kind to Oviedo. When the sides met at Oviedo on 24 August 2025, Real Madrid won 3-0. Before that, the historical meetings are scattered across the turn of the century, but the broader theme is easy to spot: Madrid have usually had the edge, and Oviedo haven’t been able to keep them quiet for long.
One small but useful pattern stands out from those meetings. Oviedo haven’t kept a clean sheet in six straight head-to-heads, while Madrid have avoided defeat in six in a row. That’s not ancient history, exactly, but it does fit the current mismatch in quality. If Oviedo are to change that, they’ll need a near-perfect defensive night. Good luck with that.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/9 here, and it’s the cleanest play on the board. Madrid have the home firepower to do most of the work themselves, while Oviedo’s away record is leaky enough to keep the scoreline moving. Add in the fact that Madrid have scored first in five of their last six league games, and you can see how this becomes a one-way flow if the hosts land early.
The 2-1 correct score feels about right. Madrid should create plenty, but Oviedo have shown just enough willingness to nick a goal — and Madrid’s own recent defending hasn’t been perfect enough to rule that out. If you want a slight alternative, Real Madrid to score over 1.5 team goals looks solid too. Still, the main call is the total. Three goals looks the natural line.