Peñarol arrive in strong shape for a low-scoring contest, unbeaten in six league matches and coming off a 2-0 away win at Boston River on 25 March and a 3-1 home victory over Cerro before that. Racing de Montevideo are also hard to beat, but their recent league run has been built on narrow margins, including a 1-1 draw with Progreso and 1-0 wins over Liverpool UY and Cerro. With both sides conceding little and neither turning games into open shootouts, the case for under 2.5 goals is clear.
The home and away splits also point toward restraint rather than a lively scoreline. Peñarol’s home record in the league is 3 wins and 1 draw with 9 goals scored and 4 conceded, while Racing’s away record is 2 wins and 1 draw with only 5 scored and 2 conceded. Those numbers sit below the league’s modest scoring averages, and the projected xG of 1.2 for Peñarol and 0.8 for Racing leaves this in the same tight range.
Head-to-head meetings have tended to stay contained too, with under 2.5 goals landing in four of the last five between them. The most recent clash was a 1-0 Peñarol win in January 2026, which fits the pattern of short margins and limited openings. Racing’s recent away wins have also been by a single goal, so even when they get results, the scoring usually stays controlled.
There is a small tension with the 1-1 score prediction, because that would need both teams to find a goal, but it still sits comfortably inside the total. Peñarol have a better first-to-score profile in this fixture, and Racing have gone through their last five league games with just one total goal allowed in each of their wins, which keeps the match around the lower end of the range. If the game opens up at all, it would need to break a trend that has been very consistent on both sides.
My prediction is Under 2.5 Goals at 65/100. Peñarol have seen under 2.5 goals in four of their last five league matches, Racing have gone under 2.5 goals in five of their last five league matches, and the head-to-head has landed under 2.5 in four of the last five meetings. Add in Peñarol’s 9-4 home goal split and Racing’s 5-2 away goal split, and this looks more likely to stay tight than to become a three-goal game.