Racing de Montevideo come into Saturday’s game in strong shape, with five matches unbeaten in the league and four wins in their last five across all competitions. At home they have conceded only five goals in five league games, and the pattern has been controlled rather than open, with a 1-0 win over Cerro, a 1-0 win over Liverpool UY and a 1-1 draw with Progreso among their recent home results.
That profile matters for a BTTS - No call because Racing have recently been keeping games tight at both ends. They have gone five league matches without losing, but more importantly they have first scored in five straight league fixtures and kept things compact enough to leave opponents chasing the game. Juventud’s away record also leans the same way: no away wins, just one draw and three losses, plus only four away goals in the league.
Juventud de Las Piedras arrive in poor scoring form, with five matches without a win and losses in each of their last five league outings. They have failed to score in defeats at Cerro and against Albion FC, and even when they did find the net against Boston River, they still lost 2-1. Their away numbers are especially thin, with just one point from four league trips and nine goals conceded, which is not the kind of profile that usually helps both teams to score.
There is a small tension with the head-to-head record, because the last meeting in Montevideo finished 0-0 and four of the last five meetings have stayed under 2.5 goals. Even so, the cleaner angle here is still the visitors’ lack of reliable finishing, especially away from home, against a Racing side that has just enough control to shut a game down once they get ahead.
My prediction is BTTS - No at 73/100. Racing have kept a clean sheet in several of their recent league wins, Juventud have gone five league games without victory and struggled badly away from home, and their last away results have not produced the kind of attacking threat needed to force both sides onto the scoresheet. The 0-0 in the most recent meeting at Racing also fits that pattern, even if the 1-1 xG projection leaves a little room for caution.