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Tondela host CD Nacional in the Liga Portugal Betclic on Saturday evening, 25 April 2026, and both sides arrive with plenty still hanging in the balance. For Tondela, the picture is grim enough: they sit 17th on 21 points and badly need points to drag themselves away from the lower reaches of the table. CD Nacional aren’t exactly comfortable either, but 14th place and 28 points gives them a little more breathing room. Neither side can afford to drift here. A draw won’t thrill either camp, yet for Tondela it may still feel like a useful step if they can stop the bleeding.
There’s also a clear contrast in momentum. Gonçalo Feio’s side haven’t won in six league matches and have spent much of the spring chasing games rather than controlling them. Tiago Margarido’s Nacional are at least showing a bit more life, with a win over FC Alverca fresh in the bank and a couple of decent home performances before that. This is the sort of fixture that can drag a team into trouble or give it a platform. Tondela need the latter. They’ve had far too little of it.
Tondela’s recent run has been a slog. Their last six league games have brought no wins at all, and the pattern is familiar by now: a decent effort here, a collapse there, and not enough quality at either end to turn pressure into points. The 2-0 defeat at FC Porto on 19 April was one of the more predictable results in the calendar, but even there the numbers were ugly — only five shots, just 0.13 xG, and Porto repeatedly finding space to work with. That one never looked like a contest.
Before that, they were held 2-2 at home by Gil Vicente, which at least hinted at some fight. Then came the 5-0 hammering away to Vitória SC, a result that really exposed the gap between Tondela and a more polished opponent. Their home form has been just as frustrating. A goalless draw with AVS, a 1-0 loss to Rio Ave, and a 2-2 draw with Santa Clara tell the same story: they’re not getting run over at home, but they’re not doing enough to win there either. The only home victory in the league this season came all the way back on 3 January, a 3-1 win over FC Arouca. That feels a long time ago now.
The home record is blunt. One win, seven draws and seven defeats at their own ground, with 11 goals scored and 19 conceded. That’s the profile of a side that can hang around in matches but rarely land the punch that matters. They’re drawing too much, and when they do lose, they often look second best rather than unlucky. The xG output at home isn’t awful for a side down near the bottom, but the return in points is poor. You can see why. They don’t finish enough chances, and they don’t keep enough clean sheets. Simple as that.
There is a small positive for Feio: Tondela usually manage to stay in the game for long spells, and they’ve got enough from home fixtures to suggest they won’t be overrun by Nacional. Still, the lack of wins hangs over everything. Six league matches without one. That’s the whole problem. They can compete, but they can’t close.
CD Nacional come into this off the back of a tidy 1-0 home win over FC Alverca, and it was exactly the sort of performance they needed. Controlled enough, disciplined enough, and just sharp enough when it mattered. Jesús Ramírez’s 67th-minute goal settled it, and the underlying numbers were respectable too: 1.01 xG, just 0.36 conceded, and enough defensive control to keep Alverca at arm’s length. That won’t make headlines, but it does the job.
Their recent league run has been mixed rather than disastrous. There was a 2-0 defeat at Benfica, which is hardly a surprise, and a 1-0 loss at Famalicão before that. But there were also home wins against CF Estrela Amadora and Alverca, and a draw away to Moreirense earlier in March. So the shape is there, even if the consistency isn’t. Nacional can steady themselves at home. On the road, they’ve been much more ordinary.
That away record is a major reason this fixture looks balanced. Two wins, five draws and eight defeats from 15 league trips, with 12 scored and 20 conceded. Those numbers aren’t pretty. They show a team that can nick results but rarely dominates away from their own ground. In practical terms, Nacional tend to keep matches relatively tight, then rely on moments rather than sustained pressure. They’ve got a habit of being first to concede on the road too, which is not the sort of trait you want when travelling to a side that’s desperate for a response.
Still, there’s no sense that Nacional are in freefall. Their defensive output is better than Tondela’s overall, and the recent 1-0 win over Alverca should help them travel with a bit more belief. Tiago Margarido’s side won’t be heading into this thinking they have to chase the game from the off. They’ll be happy to keep it compact, frustrate Tondela, and see whether the home side’s confidence cracks. That’s a sensible plan. It might well work.
These two have produced some lively meetings in recent seasons. Nacional beat Tondela 3-1 in Madeira in December 2025, which is the freshest reference point and probably the most relevant too. Before that, Tondela edged a friendly 2-1 in July 2025, but league meetings have often gone either way. The two sides shared a 1-1 draw in January 2024, while Nacional won 3-2 in Tondela in May 2024. That one would’ve hurt the hosts.
What stands out is the pattern of both teams finding the net. That’s happened in four of the last five meetings, and it fits the feel of this fixture. Tondela don’t keep many clean sheets, Nacional don’t shut teams out away from home very often, and recent history says there’s usually something for both attacks to work with. No one should be expecting a sterile evening. Not here.
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 8/15 here, which feels the most reliable angle in a match that has draw written all over it. Tondela are winless in six, yes, but they’ve drawn three of their last six and have enough home stubbornness to avoid folding at their own ground. Nacional are more stable overall, yet their away record is still patchy enough to leave them vulnerable if this becomes a scrap rather than a footballing showcase.
The safest read is a tight game with very little between them. The xG projection has it almost level at 1.2 for Tondela and 1.1 for Nacional, and the likely scoreline looks like 1-1. That fits the shape of both sides’ season: Tondela struggling to turn home draws into wins, Nacional good enough to compete but not ruthless enough to take control away from home. If you wanted a slightly bolder angle, both teams to score has some appeal given the recent head-to-head trend. But the double chance on the home side is the cleaner play.
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