Deportivo La Coruña host Mirandés at Riazor on Monday evening in LaLiga 2, and the timing matters for both clubs. Deportivo are clinging to a top-four place and still dreaming of a promotion push, while Mirandés arrive stuck in the lower reaches of the table and in need of points to put some daylight between themselves and trouble. There’s plenty on the line for one side and a fair bit of pride on the line for the other.
For Deportivo, this is the kind of fixture they really need to control. They’re fourth with 61 points, they’ve lost only eight all season, and Antonio Hidalgo’s side have built a position that gives them a real shot at the endgame. Mirandés, 21st with 33 points, can’t afford many more soft afternoons. Antxón Muneta’s team are still hanging around, but their margin for error is thin. Very thin.
The numbers point to a match with goals in it, and the recent form of both teams says the same thing. Deportivo have been hard to beat for weeks, Mirandés have become the sort of side who can score but rarely keep things tidy at the back. That usually creates a game with a bit of life. Not always a classic. But rarely dull.
Deportivo La Coruña Form & Analysis
Deportivo’s recent run has been solid rather than spectacular, and that’s probably exactly why they’re sitting inside the promotion places. Their last six league games have brought a good mix of grit and control: a 1-1 draw away to Huesca on 12 April, another 1-1 at home to Málaga on 4 April, then a more convincing 2-0 win over Córdoba on 31 March. Before that came a 1-1 draw away to Sporting Gijón, a 2-1 home win against Real Zaragoza, and a 2-1 success at AD Ceuta. They’ve gone six league matches unbeaten, and that run has been built on being difficult to knock off course.
The home record, though, is a little more human than the league position might suggest. Deportivo have taken 29 points from 17 matches at Riazor, with eight wins, five draws and four defeats, scoring 23 and conceding 17. That’s a decent base, not a dominant one. They’re not blowing sides away in front of their own crowd, but they’re doing enough to keep themselves in the promotion race. The flip side is that only 23 home goals tells you they don’t always turn possession into a flood of chances. You can nick a point here if you stay organised.
Still, they’ve got a useful habit of finding a way through. The 2-0 against Córdoba showed the cleaner side of their game, while the wins over Zaragoza and Ceuta were the sort that keep momentum alive. Even in the 1-1 at Huesca, they didn’t fold after the opening exchanges. In fact, that game told a fairly clear story: Deportivo had 17 shots to Huesca’s nine, matched them for big chances, and came away with a point after late goals from Luismi Cruz and Álvaro Carrillo. That’s a team that stays in matches. And that matters.
There’s also a practical edge here. Deportivo aren’t leaking goals at a frightening rate, but they’re not shutting teams out week after week either. Their home return of 17 conceded suggests Riazor isn’t a fortress. Still, with six games unbeaten and a clear league objective in front of them, they’ve got enough structure to make life awkward for any mid-table-or-lower opponent. They won’t need much to take control. Just a decent first half and a bit of rhythm.
Mirandés Form & Analysis
Mirandés arrive with a very different feel about them. They’ve had moments in recent weeks, but consistency has been a problem all season and their league position reflects that. Their last six have been a mixed bag: a lively 2-2 draw at home to CD Castellón on 12 April, a good 2-1 away win over Real Zaragoza on 5 April, a 1-1 home draw with Albacete on 31 March, another 2-2 away at Córdoba on 27 March, a 2-1 home win against Real Valladolid on 22 March, and a 0-2 defeat at home to Cádiz on 13 March. There’s enough attacking output there to keep them in games. The issue is the back door. It’s almost always open.
Away from home, Mirandés have taken 16 points from 17 matches, with four wins, four draws and nine defeats, scoring 20 and conceding 28. That’s not disastrous, but it’s not good enough for a side that wants to climb away from danger. They’ve actually shown they can nick results on the road — the win at Zaragoza proves that — yet the overall picture is one of a team that spends too much time chasing games. They’ve been beaten away nine times, which is far too many to feel comfortable going to a side in Deportivo’s position.
Their most recent outing summed them up neatly. Against Castellón, they scored twice at home and still needed to survive a proper scare. They ended up with a 2-2 draw despite conceding 19 shots and 6 big chances, and the xG split was ugly: 1.04 to 2.79. Jeremy Mellot was sent off, which didn’t help, but the bigger issue was the amount of pressure they allowed. That’s been a theme. They can score. They can fight. They just don’t look reliable when a match turns messy.
The road form leaves little room for optimism either. Mirandés have only four away wins all season, and they’ve conceded 28 goals in those trips. They’re not dead on arrival, though. This isn’t a side that folds after the first setback. They’ve scored in enough away games to keep the scoreline honest, and that’s why they remain awkward opponents. The problem is simple: if Deportivo get on top, Mirandés don’t look built to keep them out for long.
Head-to-Head
These two have had some eye-catching meetings in recent seasons, and the scorelines have swung wildly. Deportivo’s 5-1 win away in September 2025 was a statement result, especially on Mirandés’ patch. Just a few months earlier, in April 2025, the sides played out a 2-2 draw in Mirandés, while Mirandés had thumped Deportivo 4-0 in La Coruña in December 2024. That’s the sort of sequence that tells you this fixture can produce chaos if the game opens up early.
There’s also a slightly awkward pattern for Deportivo in this matchup: they’ve gone eight straight head-to-head meetings without keeping a clean sheet. That’s hard to ignore. Even so, the overall tone of the recent meetings leans towards goals and a bit of volatility rather than cagey control. You wouldn’t want to bank on either defence strolling through this one untouched.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 2/7 here, and it’s the sort of line that looks very fair for Monday night. Deportivo have scored in five of their last six league matches, Mirandés have scored in five of theirs, and neither side is making a habit of shutting opponents out. That alone gets you most of the way there. Add in the shape of the recent head-to-head meetings and this feels like a line that should land without too much fuss.
The expected rhythm points the same way. Deportivo are strong enough at home to create chances, Mirandés are loose enough away to give them, and the 1.5 xG projection for Deportivo against 1.1 for Mirandés hints at a game where both sides can get into decent areas. A 2-1 Deportivo win feels right. One goal each would also fit the flow, but Deportivo’s home edge and better league form should tip this towards the hosts. If you want a more aggressive angle, Both Teams to Score has obvious appeal given Mirandés’ tendency to score and concede in the same breath.