Real Racing Club and Almería meet at the sharp end of the LaLiga 2 table on Sunday evening, 12 April 2026, with first place and second place on the line. That’s about as direct as it gets. José Alberto López’s side go in top with 62 points, one clear of Rubi’s Almería, and this one has the feel of a fixture that could shape the promotion race for the run-in rather than just decorate it.
There’s no need to dress it up. Racing are trying to protect pole position, Almería are trying to take it. Both clubs have pushed hard all season, both have scored heavily, and both have shown enough wobble at the back to keep this from smelling like a cagey top-of-the-table stalemate. The oddsmakers have leaned toward goals, and on the evidence, that call looks fair.
The wider context matters too. Racing have built their place at the summit on home form, while Almería arrive with one of the better away records in the division. That’s what makes this so appealing. You’ve got two sides who can play, two defences that don’t always hold up, and two attacks that rarely need much encouragement. Goals feel likely. Plenty of them.
Real Racing Club Form & Analysis
Racing’s recent run has been a proper rollercoaster. They opened March with a lively 4-3 home win over Córdoba, a game that said plenty about their attacking edge and just as much about their defensive looseness. A week later they went to Cultural Leonesa and nicked a 2-1 away win, which was a better sign of control, before the mood darkened badly at home against Albacete Balompié. That 0-4 defeat was a hammer blow. Brutal. It wasn’t the sort of result you expect from a team sitting at the top of the table.
They did respond with a 3-1 home win over Sporting Gijón on 1 April, and for a while that looked like the reset they needed. Then came the trip to FC Andorra on 5 April, and Racing were torn apart in a 6-2 defeat. The scoreline was wild, but the numbers behind it were even harsher: they conceded 21 shots, nine on target and nine big chances, and their xGA of 3.41 tells the same story. That won’t settle José Alberto López. Not one bit. Even so, Racing have still won three of their last six, and at home they’ve been strong enough to stay in the title fight.
Their home record is a big reason they’re top. Eleven wins, two draws and four defeats at their own ground, with 38 scored and 24 conceded, gives them a platform few teams in the division can match. They’ve been especially threatening in the final third, and with 67 league goals overall they’re among the most productive sides in LaLiga 2. The flip side? They don’t keep enough clean sheets. Racing have now gone seven matches without one, and that kind of streak matters when a direct rival like Almería comes to town. You can’t keep handing out invitations.
Still, there’s no doubt about the offensive ceiling. Racing have scored in waves at home, and their style usually drags matches toward end-to-end territory. They’re not built for survival mode. They want the ball moving, they want the game stretched, and they’re happy to trade blows if that’s what it takes. That can work beautifully when the finishing is sharp. It can also leave them exposed when the press gets broken.
Almería Form & Analysis
Almería arrive with a form line that looks tidy enough on paper and dangerous enough in practice. Their last six have brought four wins and two defeats, and there’s a clear pattern to the way they’ve been playing: when they’re on it, they’re ruthless. When they’re off it, they can be picked apart. That’s a pretty useful profile for a team chasing the top spot, provided the good days keep coming often enough.
The most recent result was a 2-1 home win over Leganés on 5 April, a match they controlled for long stretches. Gonzalo Melero struck early, Sergio Arribas added a second before half-time, and although the margin was only one goal at the end, the underlying numbers were strong. Almería produced 2.74 xG, hit 18 shots and won the big-chance count 5-1. That’s the sort of performance that looks sustainable. Before that, though, they slipped to a 2-0 defeat away to CD Castellón. No scoreline sugar-coating there. They were flat, and they paid for it.
The rest of the recent sequence tells a fuller story. They beat Real Sociedad B U21 5-1 at home on 29 March, which was one of those nights where everything they touched seemed to turn dangerous. On 20 March they went to Huesca and won 3-1, another sign that this team can travel well when it clicks. Then came that loss at Real Zaragoza on 14 March, and before that a comfortable 3-0 home win over Cultural Leonesa. So it’s been a mix, but not a worrying one. Six goals against Zaragoza and Castellón across the two defeats? That’s the sort of inconsistency that stops a side from looking truly dominant. The attack keeps them alive. The defence keeps the door ajar.
Away from home, Almería’s record is respectable without being bulletproof. Six wins, five draws and six defeats from 17 league trips, with 23 goals scored and 23 conceded, says they’re competitive on the road but not untouchable. They’ve got enough craft and pace to hurt you in transition, and enough quality in the final third to create chances against most opponents. Yet that even split in goals for and against away from home tells you they’re rarely controlling matches away from Andalusia. They’re in them, but they’re not always in charge.
That matters here because Racing will force the issue at home. Almería can live with that, especially when the game opens up, but they won’t want to spend long spells pinned back. Can they keep the loose moments to a minimum? That’s the question. If they can’t, Racing will make them pay.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings have been lively, and there’s no reason to expect a sleepy follow-up here. In September 2025, Racing went to Almería and won 3-2 in a proper contest. That result fits the way both clubs have tended to play: open enough to create chances, vulnerable enough to allow them.
Go back a little further and the pattern softens, but not by much. Almería beat Racing 2-0 in May 2025, and the reverse fixture in August 2024 ended 2-2. Before that, you’ve got 1-1 and 0-1 results stretching back to earlier campaigns. The main takeaway is simple. These teams have a habit of making life interesting for each other. Not always in a clean, controlled way. Usually the opposite.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/15 here, and it’s the strongest play on the board. You don’t need to squint too hard to see why. Racing have a nasty habit of turning games into goal-heavy scrambles, they’ve gone seven matches without a clean sheet, and Almería arrive with enough attacking quality to contribute their share. Both sides have scored freely all season, both can be exposed when the game stretches, and the top-of-the-table pressure shouldn’t make this cautious. It should make it frantic.
A 2-1 Racing win is the call, with the home edge and their strong record at El Sardinero just enough to tip it their way. That said, this isn’t a banker for one side to run away with it. Almería’s away record is too solid for that. If you want a little extra interest, Both Teams to Score is the natural alternative, because these two don’t exactly scream clean-sheet football.