FC Alverca welcome Casa Pia to the Liga Portugal Betclic on Sunday evening, 12 April 2026, with both sides still trying to drag themselves clear of the lower reaches of the table. Alverca sit 12th on 32 points, a fairly ordinary mid-table position that still leaves little room for complacency. Casa Pia are lower down in 16th with 25 points, and every dropped point from here starts to feel heavy. This isn’t a glamour fixture, but it matters. A lot.
There’s a different kind of pressure on each side. Custódio’s Alverca have done enough to avoid being dragged into the worst of the scrap, yet their goal difference tells you they’re not exactly comfortable. Casa Pia, under Álvaro Pacheco, are the more anxious camp. They’ve spent most of the season drawing too many and losing enough to stay in trouble. That’s the story of their campaign. Too many near-misses, not enough wins.
There’s also a slight edge to the meeting because these two have already crossed paths this season. Alverca beat Casa Pia 2-0 away from home in the league on 29 November 2025, a result that should give the hosts confidence. Still, this is a different venue and a different moment. Casa Pia need points more urgently, and that usually makes for a scrappier contest. Goals won’t come easy. That much feels clear.
FC Alverca Form & Analysis
Alverca arrive off the back of a proper away win at Rio Ave, a 2-1 success on 4 April that felt like a useful release after a mixed run. They’d been trundling along with a string of draws before that, and the victory at Rio Ave gave them something they’d been missing for a while: a clean, decisive result. Before it, they drew 1-1 at Vitória SC, shared a 2-2 at Gil Vicente, and were held 0-0 at home by AVS - Futebol SAD. There was also the heavy 4-1 home loss to Sporting CP in the middle of that spell, which was hardly a surprise, but it did remind everyone of the gap between Alverca and the league’s heavy hitters.
The broader pattern is obvious. They’re not a side that runs away with games. They’ve got 29 league goals all season, and that’s modest rather than encouraging. At home, the picture is even starker: five wins, four draws and five defeats, with just 12 goals scored and 20 conceded at their own ground. That’s not the sort of home record that makes opponents quake. It’s steady enough, but not more than that. Alverca can be competitive, yes. Ruthless? No.
What they do have is enough resilience to stay in matches. The 1-1 draws with Santa Clara and Vitória SC weren’t flash-in-the-pan results; they were part of a long stretch where they’ve proved difficult to shake off. Mind you, they’ve also gone three straight home league matches without keeping a clean sheet, and that matters when you’re facing a side that will be desperate not to leave empty-handed. Custódio’s team are capable of scoring, but they rarely blow people away. They’ll need control rather than chaos here.
Casa Pia Form & Analysis
Casa Pia’s recent run is the sort that keeps a manager awake. They drew 1-1 at home to Benfica on 6 April, which sounds like a shiny result until you dig into the performance and see they were second best for long spells. Before that came the brutal 4-0 defeat at CF Estrela Amadora, then a goalless draw at Estoril Praia. There was another 1-1 draw at home to Moreirense, a 2-0 loss away to Famalicão, and then a rare lift: a 3-2 win over FC Arouca back on 14 February. Since that victory, they’ve gone five league games without another.
That’s the problem. They keep finding ways to avoid disaster just often enough to stay alive, but not often enough to climb. Their overall record — five wins, ten draws, twelve defeats — says everything about the season. They’re hard to beat on some days and far too easy to frustrate on others. Away from home, the numbers are ugly enough: three wins, three draws and eight defeats, with only 10 goals scored and 26 conceded. That is a poor travelling return. You don’t need to dress it up.
The Benfica draw may look like a turning point, but it came with very little attacking threat. Casa Pia managed just 0.30 expected goals in that match and only two shots on target. They were hanging on for large spells. That isn’t a recipe for sustained improvement, especially not away from home where they’ve struggled to carry any punch. Álvaro Pacheco’s side can compete, sure, but they’re not producing enough in the final third to trust them fully. The flip side? They’re not usually a complete write-off either. That’s why they keep dragging matches into draw territory.
Head-to-Head
Alverca have already shown they can handle this opponent. The 2-0 win at Casa Pia in late November was the cleaner, more convincing of the two recent meetings listed, and it’s the one that matters most because it came in the league. They were organised, compact and efficient. No drama. Just a job done.
There’s no long rivalry pattern to lean on from the available meetings, but that league result does nudge the mood in Alverca’s direction. Casa Pia did win a friendly between the sides in August 2025, though that’s hardly the sort of reference point you’d build a serious case on. The proper competitive meeting points one way. That counts for something.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 4/5 looks the right call for this one. Casa Pia haven’t won much, but they’ve drawn enough games to keep themselves in the frame, and their away record isn’t as hopeless as the table suggests. Alverca are steadier at home than they are spectacular, and their 12 goals scored at their own ground is hardly intimidating. Put that together with Casa Pia’s ability to make matches messy, and the insurance on the away side feels sensible.
A 1-1 draw is the scoreline that fits best. Alverca have the better league position and the stronger recent result, but Casa Pia just about have enough stubbornness to avoid being rolled over. This should be tight, low on glamour and decided by margins. If you wanted a little extra interest, under 2.5 goals also has a strong case, though the draw protection is the cleaner play here.