Celta Vigo return to Balaídos needing a proper response on Thursday evening, with SC Freiburg in town for the second leg of this UEFA Europa League knockout tie on 16 April 2026. The first leg in Germany was painful for Claudio Giráldez’s side, a 3-0 defeat that left them with a mountain to climb. It wasn’t just the scoreline either. Freiburg were tidy, efficient and ruthless, and Celta now need a performance that looks nothing like the one they produced a week ago.
For Julian Schuster’s Freiburg, the job is simple. Protect the lead, keep the game calm, and make Celta chase. A place in the next round is there for the taking. For the hosts, it’s about restoring some pride and trying to drag the tie into something uncomfortable. They’re not out of this, but they’re close. That first-leg result means they need energy, early pressure and, above all, a goal. Preferably two. Easy? Not remotely.
The wider context matters too. This is a knockout tie, so every mistake feels heavier than usual. Celta have to balance urgency with control, because opening up too early would be suicide against a Freiburg side that already know how to punish space. Freiburg, on the other hand, don’t need to force anything. They can sit on their advantage and let the clock work for them. That’s a dangerous place for the home side to be.
Celta Vigo Form & Analysis
Celta’s recent run has been a bit of a mess, and the first-leg defeat in Freiburg sat neatly in the middle of it. They went to Valencia on 5 April and came away with a lively 3-2 win, a result that suggested they still had some attacking life in them. Then came the European trip, and that ended in a 3-0 loss. Back in LaLiga at home against Real Oviedo last Sunday, they were beaten 3-0 again. That hurt. Before that, they’d lost a mad one 4-3 at home to Deportivo Alavés, though they did at least show some fight in a 2-0 win away at Lyon on 19 March. The 1-1 draw at Real Betis on 15 March sits there as the last time they picked up a point without either winning or losing. Since then, it’s been volatile and ugly in equal measure.
The real concern for Giráldez is what’s happening at Balaídos. Celta have lost their last two home games without scoring, and the Oviedo defeat was especially awkward because they actually had enough of the ball to create chances. They generated 0.90 xG against 1.71 xGA, so the issue wasn’t just bad luck. They were opened up. They’ve now gone four matches without a clean sheet, and that sort of fragility is a problem when you’re chasing a tie. Three goals down at home, and no shutout in sight. That’s a rough combination.
Still, Celta aren’t completely blunt. Their away win at Valencia showed they can find openings when the game stretches, and the Lyon result proved they’re capable of handling pressure on the European stage when the shape is right. The issue is consistency. One good night is followed by a collapse, then another decent spell is followed by chaos. You can’t bank on them producing a serene, controlled 90 minutes. They don’t look like that sort of side. To turn this tie around, they need a fast start and a cleaner defensive platform. Both have been in short supply lately.
SC Freiburg Form & Analysis
Freiburg arrive in Galicia in a strong mood. They beat Celta 3-0 at home on 9 April, then followed that with a disciplined 1-0 away win at Mainz on 12 April. That’s a proper week’s work. Before that, they were edged 3-2 by Bayern München in a home Bundesliga thriller, which was no disgrace, and they’d already put KRC Genk to the sword with a 5-1 Europa League win at home on 19 March. There was also a 2-1 success away at St. Pauli in the league, sandwiched around a 1-0 home loss to Union Berlin. In short, Freiburg have had the odd setback, but they keep bouncing back. That counts for plenty in a tie like this.
Away from home, they’ve been competitive and fairly clinical. The win at Mainz was built on control rather than chaos. No fireworks, just a narrow victory, a clean sheet, and enough discipline to get over the line. Their 1-0 success at St. Pauli also showed a side that can manage ugly away games without losing its head. That matters on a European night when a visiting team only needs to keep things simple. Freiburg don’t need a repeat of the first leg, but they’ll fancy their chances of scoring again if Celta push too hard. They’re already up 3-0 on aggregate and that gives them a lot of freedom to pick their moments.
The xG from the Mainz game was modest, just 0.57, and that tells you they’re not always a relentless attacking machine away from home. But they don’t need to be. Schuster’s side are perfectly happy to work from structure, stay compact and nick the moments that matter. They’ve also shown they can start strongly in Europe, having thumped Genk 5-1. The flip side? They aren’t invincible. Bayern beat them 3-2, Union Berlin got them, and if Celta come out aggressively, there’s no guarantee Freiburg will simply glide through. Still, with a three-goal cushion, the away side are in a good spot. Very good, actually.
Head-to-Head
The first leg between these sides was played on 9 April 2026 and ended SC Freiburg 3-0 Celta Vigo in the Europa League. Freiburg were the cleaner team, the sharper team and the one that looked most at ease in the tie. Celta never really got a foothold.
That result is the only direct meeting in the supplied data, so there’s no long historical pattern to lean on. Even so, the immediate message is clear enough. Freiburg already know how to hurt Celta, and Celta now have to do the hard part while carrying the memory of that defeat. That’s not ideal. Not at all.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 1/4 here, and it’s hard to argue with that price in a knockout tie that already has a 3-0 first-leg scoreline hanging over it. Celta have to attack, Freiburg have enough quality to nick a goal on the break, and the margin for error for the home side is basically gone. One goal changes the feel of the night immediately. Two goals is very live.
The 2-1 correct score call fits the script well. Celta should have enough urgency to score at home, but Freiburg have already shown they can punish space and manage games properly. A 1-0 or 1-1 wouldn’t shock anyone, but the overall shape of the tie points to at least two goals. If you want a slightly braver angle, Freiburg to score first also has appeal given their edge in the first leg and their comfort in controlled away matches.