CD Castellón host Burgos Club de Fútbol at the Estadio Municipal Castalia on Saturday evening, 18 April 2026, in a meeting that matters a lot to the top end of LaLiga 2. Burgos arrive in sixth on 60 points, Castellón sit just behind them in seventh on 58. That’s the simple bit. The bigger picture is promotion pressure, playoff positioning and the small margins that decide whether a season ends in celebration or frustration.
Both clubs are right in the thick of it, and neither can really afford to blink now. Castellón have turned Castalia into a proper source of points, while Burgos have quietly built one of the better away records in the division. There’s a lot of tension packed into this one. It’s not just about who’s in better form. It’s about who handles the pressure better.
This is also a game with a bit of recent history behind it. Burgos held Castellón to a 0-0 draw in November, but that came after Castellón beat them 2-1 at home in March 2025 and 2-0 away in September 2024. So the hosts have had the edge in the recent meetings, and that’ll matter. Small edge, sure. But in a tight promotion chase, small edges are everything.
CD Castellón Form & Analysis
Castellón come into this one with momentum, even if the last result felt like one that got away. They went to Mirandés on 12 April and came away with a 2-2 draw in a game that had a bit of everything. They were bright going forward, created plenty, and led the expected chances battle comfortably, yet they still had to settle for a point after a red card to Jeremy Mellot changed the tone of the afternoon. That’s the sort of performance that leaves mixed feelings. Good enough to believe in. Annoying enough to know there’s still work to do.
Before that, though, they’d strung together a strong little run at exactly the right time. Granada were beaten 3-2 at home on 6 April in a lively game that showed Castellón can go toe-to-toe with anyone in the section. Four days earlier, Almería were dispatched 2-0 at Castalia, a cleaner, more controlled win that underlined the value of home advantage. Go back further and there was a 1-1 draw at Albacete, another home draw with Cultural Leonesa, and that heavy 4-1 defeat at Sporting Gijón on 15 March feels like a different phase entirely. Since that loss, Castellón have gone five matches unbeaten. That matters.
Their home form is what really jumps off the page. At Castalia they’ve taken 36 points from 17 matches, with 11 wins, three draws and only three defeats. They’ve scored 35 and conceded 20 there, so it’s not just about grinding out results either. They’re usually on the front foot at home, they score regularly, and they don’t give opponents much room to settle. That fits the way Pablo Hernández’s side have played across the season too: 58 goals scored overall is a strong total, and their attacking numbers suggest a team that likes to get on the ball and force the issue. The question is whether they can keep the lid on games once they’ve gone ahead. Too often, they’ve had to sweat.
Still, you can’t ignore the signs of confidence. Castellón have scored in five straight league matches and they’ve been first to score in five of their last six, which tells you they’re not waiting around for things to happen. They start quickly. They ask questions early. That makes them dangerous at home, especially against a side like Burgos that’s happy to sit in and nick moments. If Castellón can avoid the sloppy patch that opened the door at Mirandés, they’ll feel they’ve got enough to win this.
Burgos Club de Fútbol Form & Analysis
Burgos arrive with a steadier, more controlled profile. Their last six league matches have been a picture of confidence and discipline: a 1-0 home win over Sporting Gijón on 11 April, a 3-2 comeback-style away win at Albacete on 4 April, a 1-1 draw with AD Ceuta, a 1-0 victory at Real Valladolid, a 4-0 home hammering of Córdoba, and a 0-0 draw at Eibar. That’s eight league games unbeaten now, and they’ve handled different sorts of challenges along the way. Tight game? Fine. Open game? Fine. Away from home? Still fine.
That said, there’s a different feel to Burgos away from El Plantío. Their road record is good — very good, actually — with 27 points from 17 away matches, built on eight wins, three draws and six defeats. They’ve only scored 19 away goals, though, and that tells you plenty about how they operate. Luis Miguel Ramis has got a team that travels well because it defends with real shape and patience. They don’t need many chances to hurt you. The flipside is that they’re not exactly a free-scoring side on their travels, and 18 goals conceded away from home suggests they can be dragged into tight, low-margin matches.
Their overall league numbers reflect that same balance. Burgos have 42 goals in 34 games, which is modest for a side in the playoff places, but only 29 conceded. That defensive record is serious. Properly serious. They shut down Córdoba 4-0, kept Sporting Gijón out in a 1-0 win, and only needed one moment late on against Albacete to grab all three points. Even the draw at Eibar was built on resilience. These aren’t flukes. They’re habits.
Mind you, the lack of goals does give Castellón a route into the game. Burgos are rarely chaotic, but they don’t often blow teams away either. Their away matches can drift into one-goal margins and there’s a feeling that if the hosts score first, Burgos will have to open up more than they’d like. Can they do that while keeping their shape? That’s the big question. On current evidence, they’re better at controlling games than chasing them.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings lean slightly in Castellón’s favour. Burgos and Castellón played out a 0-0 draw in Burgos back in November, but Castellón won the two meetings before that: 2-1 at home in March 2025 and 2-0 away in September 2024. There’s a clear pattern there. Castellón have generally found a way to edge Burgos, even when the margins have been slim.
That draw in November does matter, though. It showed Burgos can keep Castellón quiet when the game is played on their terms. Still, the stronger historical edge belongs to the hosts, and with Castalia behind them, they’ll fancy another result. Not by much. Enough.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing CD Castellón to win at 4/6 here. It’s a fair price for a team with a strong home record, a five-match unbeaten run, and a habit of scoring first. Burgos are hard to beat, no doubt, and their away form is one of the better marks in the division, but they don’t score enough on the road to convince fully against a Castalia side that’s winning games there with regularity.
The 2-1 correct score feels right. Castellón should have the sharper attacking edge, while Burgos are good enough to nick a goal and keep this uncomfortable. If you want a slightly safer alternative, both teams to score has a decent case too, given Castellón’s recent scoring streak and Burgos’ knack for staying in games. But the home win is the main play. Castellón have the more reliable home punch, and that should be enough.