Everton de Viña del Mar come in with six goals scored and nine conceded in seven league games, and their home return has been mixed: one win and two losses with just one goal scored and four allowed. Even so, their recent matches have not been short of action, with four of their last six across all competitions finishing with at least two goals. That matters for a line of over 1.5 because Everton have also gone four league games without a clean sheet, so even when they are competitive at home, they rarely keep games closed for long.
Ñublense arrive higher up the table and their away numbers are even more useful for a goals view: two wins and one draw from three league trips, with four scored and only one conceded. They have taken points in five straight matches since their last league defeat on 1 March, and their last six have produced goals in the 2-0, 1-0, 1-1, 2-2, 2-0 and 1-2 range. That balance is enough to keep them involved in a game that should reach at least two goals, even if the projected 1-1 scoreline leaves little room for margin.
The head-to-head record also fits a modest goals line better than a high one. Five of the last seven meetings between these sides have stayed under 2.5 goals, so this is not a fixture that usually explodes. Still, three of those seven still cleared over 1.5, and Everton’s own recent home record suggests they are often caught between scoring and conceding rather than producing low-event football.
There is a small tension with the 1-1 projection and the recent H2H trend for tighter scorelines, but it is easier to trust over 1.5 than to expect either side to shut the other out. Everton’s four-match run without a clean sheet, Ñublense’s steady away scoring, and both teams’ recent habit of landing in the one-to-two-goal range give this line enough support.
My prediction is Over 1.5 Goals at 1/3. Everton have conceded in four straight league matches, Ñublense have scored in four of their last five away league games, and both teams have recent scorelines that regularly move past a single goal. The head-to-head is not wildly open, but it has still produced at least two goals often enough to make this line the safer angle.