Mirassol welcome Bahia to the Brasileirão Betano on Sunday morning, 12 April 2026, with the pressure sitting very differently on each side. Rafael Guanaes’ team are already scrapping for survival after a grim start to the campaign, while Rogério Ceni’s Bahia arrive inside the top five and with genuine ambitions of staying in the upper reaches of the table. This one matters for both clubs, just for very different reasons.
For Mirassol, it’s about stopping the rot before it turns into a full-blown crisis. They sit 20th with just six points from nine matches and have already been dragged into the relegation mess. Bahia, by contrast, are 5th on 17 points and have the sort of start that keeps you dreaming about much more than just a comfortable mid-table finish. A win here would reinforce that feeling. A poor result would be a dent they don’t need.
There’s also a Cup-versus-league contrast in the background. Mirassol arrive off the back of a morale-boosting 1-0 home win over CA Lanús in the Libertadores, a result that at least gave the squad a lift after a bruising league spell. Bahia’s latest outing was more sobering: a 2-1 home defeat to Palmeiras, where they were outplayed for long stretches but still left with enough positive moments to remind you they’re not a soft touch. Different moods, same question. Who handles the next step better?
Mirassol Form & Analysis
Mirassol’s recent run reads like a side stuck in a trap. They’ve lost five of their last six league matches, and the defeats have come in all sorts of painful ways. There was the 1-0 loss at Palmeiras on 15 March, then the 0-1 home defeat to Coritiba four days later. A 1-0 loss at Vitória followed on 22 March, before they were edged 3-2 away by Botafogo on 2 April in a game that at least hinted at some attacking life. Then came another home setback, 0-1 against Red Bull Bragantino on 6 April, before the mood briefly improved with the Libertadores win over Lanús four days later.
That Lanús result mattered. It won’t erase the league problems, but it does show Mirassol can still dig in when required. João Victor’s 60th-minute goal settled that one after a VAR cancellation had already made the night awkward, and the numbers from the match were tidy enough: 13 shots, six on target, two big chances to none for Lanús, and a 0.47 to 0.35 xG edge. Still, it’s hard to ignore the bigger picture. In the league, this is a side that’s been struggling to score, struggling to control games, and usually ending up on the wrong side of tight margins. That’s a bad combination.
At home, the record isn’t any more comforting. Mirassol’s league home line stands at one win, two draws and two defeats, with six goals scored and seven conceded. That tells you plenty. They’re not getting battered every week, but they’re not imposing themselves either. The matches are generally narrow, tense and low-margin. Mirassol have been in those trenches often enough already, and the one thing that really stands out is how often they’re the first side to concede. That’s the kind of habit that makes life miserable, especially against stronger visitors. They can stay competitive for spells. They rarely dictate.
Bahia Form & Analysis
Bahia arrive with a far healthier air around them, even after that 2-1 defeat to Palmeiras. The performance itself wasn’t a disaster. In fact, they matched Palmeiras in several areas and even produced more shots on target, but the late own goal stung and the points still slipped away. Before that, though, they had already shown what they’re about: a commanding 3-0 home win over Athletico on 2 April, a 2-0 victory over Red Bull Bragantino on 19 March, and a 1-0 away win at Internacional on 15 March. Their only real outlier in the recent spell was the 4-1 loss away to Remo on 22 March, and even that feels more like an ugly blip than a sign of collapse.
That’s the story of Bahia right now. They look organised, they carry a threat, and they travel well. Their away record is one of the strongest in the division so far: three wins from four, no draws, five goals scored and five conceded. That last figure is interesting. They’re not shutting teams out on the road every week, but they are winning the big moments. Can they keep doing that away from home? At this level, that’s usually the difference between a decent season and a seriously good one.
Ceni’s side have also shown they can adapt to game states. They beat Internacional away without fuss, they handled Bragantino at home, and they didn’t fold after falling behind against Palmeiras. That resilience matters here because Mirassol, for all their league struggles, usually keep things tight enough to leave opponents frustrated if the first goal doesn’t come. Bahia need to be alert. If they get sloppy in the final third, this turns into a scrap. If they move the ball quickly and pin Mirassol back, they should have enough quality to take control. On balance, their away record and superior league position make them the more trustworthy side by some distance.
Head-to-Head
There’s a recent pattern worth paying attention to, and it won’t thrill Mirassol. The sides met twice in 2025, and Mirassol came out on top in emphatic style in the return meeting, thrashing Bahia 5-1 at home on 31 August. Before that, they had drawn 1-1 in Bahia on 13 April. So the recent story is not one-sided in the usual sense, but the most eye-catching result is impossible to ignore. Bahia know Mirassol can hurt them if they get too open. Mirassol know Bahia are far steadier now than they were in that September collapse. That makes the memory useful, but not decisive.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
We are backing Double Chance X2 at 4/7 for this one. Bahia are simply the more reliable team, and their away form is far stronger than Mirassol’s home record. Three wins from four on the road is serious business. Mirassol, meanwhile, have won only once in the league all season and have spent most of the campaign losing narrow matches they haven’t done enough to control.
The most likely scoreline is 1-1, which fits the shape of this fixture nicely. Mirassol should make it awkward, especially after the lift from the Lanús win, but Bahia have more attacking clarity and the better structure. A 1-0 away win wouldn’t shock anyone either. If you want a slightly more aggressive angle, Bahia draw no bet is live, though the safer play is the double chance.