Mallorca return to Son Moix on Sunday evening with the sort of game that can shape the final stretch of a season. Rayo Vallecano are the visitors in LaLiga, and while this isn’t a glamour fixture on paper, the stakes are obvious enough. Mallorca sit 16th on 31 points, only just keeping their heads above the danger line, while Rayo are 13th with 35 points and still not far enough clear to relax. Four points separate them. That’s not much at all.
There’s a different mood around the two clubs coming into it. Mallorca arrive off a huge 2-1 home win over Real Madrid, a result that changed the conversation around Martín Demichelis’ side in one afternoon. Rayo, meanwhile, have one eye on Europe after beating AEK Athens 3-0 on Thursday night in the UEFA Conference League knockout phase. That was a sharp result and a confidence boost, but it also means another turnaround, more minutes in the legs, and a bit of split focus. At this stage of the season, that matters.
For Mallorca, this is about survival and breathing room. For Rayo, it’s about not letting a decent mid-table position slide into late panic. You can dress it up any way you like, but the truth is simple: Mallorca need this badly, and home matches like this are where they’ve done their best work all season.
Mallorca Form & Analysis
Mallorca’s recent run has been messy, scrappy, and a touch hard to pin down. They lost 2-0 away at Celta Vigo on 22 February, then fell 1-0 at home to Real Sociedad six days later in a game where they couldn’t find a way through. It looked bleak then. Since that point, though, there’s been a bit more edge about them. They drew 2-2 at Osasuna on 6 March, beat Espanyol 2-1 at home on 15 March, slipped up with a 2-1 defeat at Elche on 21 March, and then produced the standout result of their season by toppling Real Madrid 2-1 at home on 4 April.
That Madrid result wasn’t a smash-and-grab in the old-fashioned sense, even if the shot count said Mallorca spent long spells under pressure. They had only six shots and two on target, yet matched Madrid for big chances at 2-2 and found the decisive goal in stoppage time through Vedat Muriqi after Manu Morlanes had opened the scoring. You can call it ruthless. You can also call it timely. Either way, it showed a side that still believes. That matters when you’re down near the bottom.
At home, Mallorca have been a different proposition from the version seen on their travels. Seven wins, four draws and four defeats at Son Moix is a solid return for a team sitting 16th overall, and the goal record tells the same story: 23 scored, 19 conceded in 15 home league games. That’s top-half home form, which is why this fixture looks more inviting for them than the league table alone suggests. They don’t dominate matches, and they certainly don’t keep things tidy — they’ve now gone 16 matches without a clean sheet, which is hard to ignore — but they do tend to make games happen on this ground.
That lack of defensive security is the concern. No question. Mallorca’s last five league matches have all seen both sides get chances, and eight of their last 10 have gone over 2.5 goals. So while they’ve picked up points at home, they rarely make life easy for themselves. You’d expect them to score here, especially given their home numbers, but you wouldn’t trust them to shut the door for 90 minutes. The upside is that they don’t need perfection to win this sort of game. They just need enough pressure, enough territory, and one of those Muriqi moments in the box.
Rayo Vallecano Form & Analysis
Rayo’s recent schedule has had a bit of everything. They won 3-1 away at Samsunspor on 12 March in the Conference League, then returned to domestic action and drew 1-1 at home against Levante UD on 16 March. Three days later they were beaten 1-0 at home by Samsunspor in the second leg, which took some of the shine off the first-leg win, and then came a narrow 1-0 league defeat away to Barcelona on 22 March. Since then they’ve steadied themselves with back-to-back wins, edging Elche 1-0 at home on 3 April before brushing aside AEK Athens 3-0 on Thursday.
The AEK result was good. Very good, in fact. Rayo scored after two minutes through Ilias Akhomach, Unai López added another before the break, and Isi Palazón wrapped it up from the spot in the second half. Still, the details matter. AEK matched them for big chances at 3-3 and finished with 10 shots to Rayo’s 10. It was a strong performance, but not one that screamed total control. That’s often the story with Rayo under Iñigo Pérez: competitive, organised enough, but rarely overwhelming.
Their away league record is where the case against them becomes much stronger. Three wins, three draws and nine defeats on the road is poor, full stop, and 12 goals scored in 15 away games is a thin return. They’ve also conceded 24 in those matches, which is far too many for a side that doesn’t create loads. That away profile is a problem here. Rayo don’t travel with much attacking punch, and when they fall behind, they don’t always have the gears to turn games around.
There is one obvious wrinkle. They’ve just come through a run of harder fixtures than Mallorca, and losing 1-0 at Barcelona isn’t exactly a disgrace. But Sunday’s test is a different one. Can they handle a lower-table scrap on the road, against a side that’s just beaten Madrid and knows this is one of the more winnable home games left? That’s less comfortable for them. Rayo are two games unbeaten since that Barcelona loss, yes, yet this away record keeps dragging the eye back. Three wins from 15. That won’t scare many hosts.
Head-to-Head
There’s a definite pattern in this fixture when Mallorca are the home side. They’ve beaten Rayo in each of the last four meetings on their own ground: 1-0 in October 2024, 2-1 in February 2024, 3-0 in June 2023, and 2-1 in May 2022. Rayo did win the reverse game 2-1 in January, so this isn’t one-way traffic overall, but Son Moix has been awkward territory for them.
That’s the key angle from the recent meetings. Mallorca seem comfortable in this matchup at home, and given the current home-away split of these two teams, it’s hard to brush that aside as coincidence.
We Predict: Home Win
Home Win at 2.38 stands out here. Mallorca’s overall league position looks ugly, but their home record doesn’t. Seven wins from 15 at Son Moix, 23 goals scored there, and fresh confidence after beating Real Madrid — that’s a much stronger base than Rayo’s away return of three wins, three draws and nine defeats. Add in the fact that Rayo are coming off a Thursday European game, and the spot leans clearly toward the hosts.
The other big factor is the matchup itself. Rayo don’t score much on the road, just 12 away league goals all season, and Mallorca have made a habit of getting results against them in Palma. There is risk here because Mallorca rarely keep clean sheets, so this doesn’t look like a serene 1-0 type of pick. A 2-1 home win feels about right, which lines up neatly with the projected scoreline and the xG split of 1.42 to 1.09. If you want an alternative angle, both teams to score has some appeal given Mallorca’s defensive run, but the stronger play is still the straight home win.