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Red Bull Bragantino return to Brasileirão Betano duty on Monday morning, 20 April 2026, with Remo the visitors to Bragança Paulista. It’s a meeting that matters at both ends of the table. Bragantino sit 12th with 14 points and are trying to build some proper momentum after a mixed start, while Remo are down in 18th on eight points and badly need a result to stop the slide from becoming a problem.
There’s a clear gap between the two on paper, and the home-away split tells its own story. Vagner Mancini’s side have been decent enough at home without looking truly secure, while Léo Condé’s Remo have been poor on the road, still winless away from home and leaking goals. That’s a bad mix when you’re heading to a side that usually carries the ball well and creates plenty in front of its own fans.
Bragantino also come into this off the back of a busy run in two competitions. Their 3-2 win over Blooming in the CONMEBOL Sudamericana on 17 April was energetic and messy in equal measure, while their league form has been up and down. Remo, by contrast, are trying to survive the early stretch of the season rather than chase anything glamorous. They’ve got more draws than wins, too many losses, and not enough sharpness on the road. That’s why this looks like a home win waiting to happen — though not necessarily a stroll.
Bragantino’s last six matches have been a proper mixed bag, but there’s enough good in there to trust them at home. They opened with a statement 3-0 home win over Flamengo on 3 April, a result that said plenty about their ceiling when everything clicks. A week later came a tidy 1-0 away win at Mirassol, only for the mood to dip with a 2-1 loss at Cruzeiro and a 1-0 defeat away to Carabobo in the Sudamericana. Then came the bounce-back: a chaotic 3-2 victory over Blooming at home on 17 April. That was breathless stuff. They led, they let it slip, and they still found a way through late on.
That Blooming game summed Bragantino up quite well. They created a mountain of chances — 29 shots, 11 on target, six big chances — and the attacking numbers were strong enough to forgive the defensive noise, even with two red cards in the match. It was a reminder that this side can overwhelm opponents at home. The flip side is just as obvious. They’ve only managed one clean sheet in their last three, and the back line isn’t exactly inspiring confidence. Still, when a team is generating that much volume in the final third, you’d expect them to score.
Their home record in the league is solid rather than spectacular: two wins, one draw and two defeats, with seven goals scored and five conceded. That’s a decent platform, especially when you compare it with the league’s general home trend, where teams are scoring more and creating more than away sides. Bragantino fit that pattern. They’re not impregnable, but they’ve got enough attacking pace and enough territory at home to ask awkward questions. If Mancini’s side keep the tempo high, Remo will spend long spells pinned back.
Remo’s recent run reads like the record of a side that’s hard to beat for spells, yet far too easy to wear down over 90 minutes. Their last six league matches include a strong 4-1 home win over Bahia on 22 March, but that’s been the outlier. Since then they’ve lost 3-0 at Flamengo, 1-0 at Coritiba and 2-0 at Santos, before grinding out a goalless draw away to Grêmio on 6 April. That result looked useful on the surface, but it came after another match in which they needed to withstand plenty of pressure. They’re hanging in games, not controlling them.
The away record is the real warning sign. Remo are winless on the road, with two draws and four defeats, and they’ve scored just three away goals while conceding 11. That’s not close to good enough. They can settle into games for a while, but once they fall behind, they don’t have the evidence of a side that can chase properly and turn momentum around. This is a team with enough stubbornness to frustrate for an hour, then a habit of fading. That’s a dangerous combination when the opponent is likely to dominate the ball.
There is a small scrap of encouragement in the Grêmio draw. Remo kept their shape well, and even though the shot count was against them, they created two big chances and finished with an xG of 2.06. On another day, that turns into an away win. On most days, though, it won’t. They also had a penalty awarded and then missed it, which only sharpened the sense of a side that’s lacking a clean final touch. Against Bragantino, they’ll need more than resilience. They’ll need efficiency. Right now, that’s not their strength.
There isn’t a finished head-to-head sample here, so there’s no proper historical trend to lean on. That leaves us with the present state of both squads, and that’s enough to make a strong call. Bragantino are the better side, they’re at home, and Remo’s away record is grim. You don’t need much more than that.
We’re backing Red Bull Bragantino to win this at 4/9. It’s short enough to be justified. Mancini’s side have already shown they can produce a heavy home performance, as the 3-0 win over Flamengo proved, and their attacking numbers at home are comfortably stronger than Remo’s away output. The visitors haven’t won on the road all season, they’ve conceded 11 away goals in six, and they’ve usually spent more time surviving than threatening. That’s a bad set-up for an underdog trying to spring a surprise.
A 2-1 Bragantino win looks the likeliest scoreline. Remo probably won’t be shut out completely — Bragantino haven’t been especially clean at the back lately, and they’ve gone three matches without a clean sheet — but the home side should still have enough firepower to take control. If you want a more conservative angle, Bragantino to score first has appeal too. They’ve been first on the board in four of their last five, and that sort of early pressure could make this one feel over before the hour mark.
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