Racing de Córdoba come into this one unbeaten in four and have kept things tight at home, where they have two wins and a draw from three league matches and only one goal conceded. Their last six have included three clean sheets, and the 0-0 away to San Martín de San Juan on 28 March was another reminder that they are comfortable in low-scoring games. That home record gives them a solid base for keeping Ciudad de Bolivar out.
Ciudad de Bolivar are harder to beat, but that is mainly because they keep drawing rather than because they threaten regularly. They are winless in their last eight league matches, with six straight draws among their last six, and they have scored only three goals in the league all season. Away from home they have still not won, with three draws and no losses, but that profile has come with just two goals scored in three trips.
The scoring pattern also leans toward a game where at least one side comes up short. Ciudad de Bolivar have been involved in eight straight league matches with fewer than 2.5 goals, while Racing’s home numbers are just 3-1 in goals across three league games. The xG projections are modest too, at 0.9 for Racing de Córdoba and 0.7 for Ciudad de Bolivar, which points to limited clear chances rather than a wide-open contest.
There is a small tension here because the projected score is 1-1, but the stronger market angle is still on the visitors failing to score. Racing’s home record has produced three clean sheets in four league games, and Ciudad de Bolivar’s attack has looked blunt throughout the campaign. Add in their away total of only two goals from three league matches, and the case for a shutout on one side remains stronger than the draw-heavy recent run suggests.
My prediction is BTTS - No at 2/5. Racing de Córdoba have kept three clean sheets in their last four home league games, Ciudad de Bolivar have scored only three times in six league matches, and their away return is just two goals from three. The visitors have also gone winless in eight league outings, which often leaves them short of the cutting edge needed to force both teams onto the scoresheet.