Mirandés host CD Castellón in LaLiga 2 on Sunday evening, 12 April 2026, with both sides arriving in very different parts of the table and carrying very different pressures. Mirandés are scrapping to keep their heads above water in 21st place on 32 points, and every home game now feels like one they simply have to squeeze something from. Castellón are up in 6th on 57 points, right in the thick of the promotion race, where dropping points can quickly turn a comfortable position into a nervous one.
It’s a neat old-style second-tier meeting, too: one team fighting to avoid being dragged deeper into trouble, the other chasing the sort of result that keeps playoff dreams alive. Mirandés have at least steadied themselves a little in the last few weeks, while Castellón have found a bit of life at exactly the right time. That makes this more than a routine late-season fixture. For Mirandés, it’s about survival. For Castellón, it’s about keeping pace. Neither side can really afford to be passive.
There’s also a recent pattern here that’s hard to ignore. The last meeting in December finished 3-1 to Castellón, but the two clubs have tended to produce open games when they’ve crossed paths. With both managers, Antxón Muneta and Pablo Hernández, trying to balance points with momentum, this one has the feel of a match where control could come and go very quickly.
Mirandés Form & Analysis
Mirandés come into this on the back of a big away win at Real Zaragoza, and that result will have done them the world of good. They trailed through the first half of the season in a fairly familiar way for a side near the bottom, but the last month has at least shown some bite. A 2-1 victory in Zaragoza on 5 April, built on a Dani Gómez penalty and late pressure, followed draws with Albacete at home and Córdoba away, plus a 2-1 home win over Real Valladolid. That’s a useful little run. Not perfect, not remotely. But better.
The problem is that their season still looks too fragile for comfort. Before that mini-upturn, they lost at home to Cádiz and were beaten away by Burgos, and the bigger picture remains ugly: 8 wins, 8 draws and 18 defeats, with 35 goals scored and 54 conceded. At home, Mirandés have only managed four wins from 17 league games, drawing four and losing nine, while shipping 26 goals at their own ground. That’s not the profile of a side you trust blindly. They can score — 15 home goals is decent enough for a struggling team — but they’re too easy to get at. Too many games become a mess.
Mind you, there is one encouraging thread. They’ve scored in bursts and they’ve rarely looked shut out for long, even when results have gone against them. Their recent unbeaten spell — four league games without defeat since the Cádiz loss — suggests a team with enough energy to make this awkward for Castellón. The flip side? Mirandés have also gone 17 games without a clean sheet in all competitions, and that’s the sort of streak that hangs over you. You don’t need to be brilliant to hurt them. You just need to be competent.
CD Castellón Form & Analysis
Castellón arrive in much better shape, and they’ll fancy this trip. Their last six league matches tell a story of recovery after a couple of rough away days. They were thumped 4-1 at Sporting Gijón on 15 March and then lost 4-2 at Real Sociedad B U21 a week later, which looked like a wobble that could easily drag on. Instead, they’ve responded well. A 1-1 draw at Albacete, then another 1-1 against Cultural Leonesa at home, and now back-to-back wins over Almería and Granada have restored momentum. The 3-2 comeback-style win over Granada on 6 April was a proper statement. They didn’t just scrape it. They took it.
That said, Castellón aren’t exactly watertight away from home. Their away record reads five wins, six draws and six defeats, with 21 goals scored and 21 conceded. Balanced, but hardly intimidating. They can travel without collapsing, which matters, and they’ve shown enough attacking quality to score consistently on the road. Still, they’ve also been beaten twice in their last four away games, and both losses were heavy. That’s the warning sign. When they’re on, they look like a team with promotion-level ambition. When they’re off, they can be exposed.
The strength here is pretty obvious: they score goals. Fifty-six league goals is a strong return, and their recent games have been lively enough to keep opponents on edge. Pablo Hernández’s side have won their last two, and they’ve scored three against Granada, two against Almería and one at Albacete in the same spell. They’re not short of cutting edge. Can they keep it together away from home? That’s the question. Against a Mirandés side who rarely keep things tidy, Castellón should get chances. The only concern is whether they give enough away at the other end to keep the contest open.
Head-to-Head
These two have developed a pattern of meeting in games with goals. Castellón beat Mirandés 3-1 in December 2025, and that was after Mirandés had won 3-2 in May 2025 and 3-1 away in November 2024. Go back a little further and you find a 1-0 Mirandés win in 2021 plus a 1-1 draw in the earlier meeting that year. The broad trend is simple enough. Both teams tend to find the net when these sides face each other.
That fits the more recent picture, too. Mirandés have struggled to keep clean sheets, Castellón have been involved in some open, swingy games, and neither side looks built to smother the other for 90 minutes. Four of the last five meetings have seen both teams score. That’s the angle that stands out.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/11 here. It’s the cleanest call on the board. Mirandés have the kind of home record that invites chaos, Castellón are scoring freely enough to contribute, and the recent head-to-heads have been anything but cagey. Even the xG projection leans that way, with Mirandés at 1.3 and Castellón at 1.4, which points towards a contest with chances at both ends rather than a tight, tactical grind.
A 1-2 away win feels the most likely scoreline. Castellón are the stronger side, but Mirandés have enough about them at home to get on the board, especially if they can build on that win at Zaragoza. Still, this doesn’t look like a clean-sheet game for either team. If you want a slightly different angle, both teams to score has plenty of appeal as well. The goals route just looks safer.