Remo host Vasco da Gama in the Brasileirão Betano on Saturday evening, 11 April 2026, and the timing already gives this one plenty of edge. For Remo, sitting 18th with just seven points from ten games, this is about stopping the early-season slide before it turns into a full-blown fight for survival. Vasco are in a healthier place in 12th, but they’re not exactly cruising either. Three wins, three draws and four defeats leaves them with work to do if they want to push away from the lower half.
There’s also a different kind of pressure hanging over both benches. Léo Condé’s Remo need a result that changes the mood around the club, while Renato Portaluppi’s Vasco are chasing consistency more than fireworks. A win for the visitors would steady them after a mixed spell. A home win for Remo would be a proper statement. That’s why this feels tighter than the table suggests.
The early league picture sharpens the stakes. Remo have only scored 10 and conceded 17 overall, which is the profile of a side that’s been in too many scrap-heavy games and not enough controlled ones. Vasco, with 15 scored and 16 conceded, are a little more open, a little more capable going forward, but still too easy to rattle. Neither side has found a rhythm yet. Saturday is a chance to start one.
Remo Form & Analysis
Remo arrive here on the back of a gritty 0-0 draw away to Grêmio on 6 April, and that result told you plenty about their current mood. They dug in, stayed alive, and left with something after a difficult trip. Before that, though, it was a painful 2-0 defeat at Santos, which followed the high point of their campaign so far — a thumping 4-1 home win over Bahia on 22 March. That night looked like a launchpad. It hasn’t quite turned out that way.
Strip the story back and Remo’s last six league matches read like a side searching for balance and not finding it often enough. They were beaten 3-0 at Flamengo, lost 1-0 at Coritiba, fell 2-0 at home to Fluminense, and then finally snapped the pattern with that encouraging point in Porto Alegre. It’s been an ugly run overall. One win in six. Not good enough for a team already hovering in the drop zone. Still, the home win over Bahia showed they can punish teams if the game opens up. That one matters.
At their own ground, the picture is a little more respectable. Remo’s home record stands at one win, two draws and one defeat, with seven goals scored and six conceded. That’s not elite, obviously, but it’s a long way from being hopeless. They’ve been competitive at home, and they’re not short of a goal when the game has the right tempo. The issue is control. They’ve often started on the back foot, and the tendency to concede first has hung around far too often. If you’re chasing from behind every week, life gets hard in a hurry.
There’s at least one encouraging sign from the draw with Grêmio: Remo weren’t just hanging on. Their xG of 2.06 to Grêmio’s 0.84 suggests they created the better chances and could easily have won it. They had 11 shots to Grêmio’s 20, but the better openings were theirs, and that matters. Even with a missed penalty and a late red card to Yago Pikachu, they came away with something tangible. The flip side? They still didn’t score. And for a side that’s only managed 10 league goals in total, that’s a familiar headache.
Vasco da Gama Form & Analysis
Vasco’s recent run is a strange one. They’ve been competitive, often lively, and rarely dull, yet the results haven’t quite stacked up. Their latest outing was a 0-0 draw away to Barracas Central in the Sudamericana group stage on 8 April, a useful enough point in continental terms but hardly a statement performance. Before that came the 2-1 home loss to Botafogo in the league, which cut into the momentum they’d built with a 1-1 draw at Coritiba, a 2-1 home win over Grêmio, and that entertaining 3-2 victory over Fluminense. Go back one more and you get a 3-3 draw at Cruzeiro. Goals have been there. Control hasn’t.
That’s the key with Vasco right now. They can trade punches with decent sides, and they’ve shown they’ve got the attacking tools to score in awkward places. They also look vulnerable when the pace goes up. The 15 goals they’ve scored in the league is a solid return for this stage of the season, but the 16 conceded are the warning light. They don’t shut games down cleanly enough. You can see why they sit in mid-table rather than making a real climb.
Away from home, the concern is sharper. Vasco’s league away record is still winless: two draws and two defeats, with six scored and eight conceded. That’s not disastrous, but it’s not the profile of a side you’d trust on the road either. They’ve been able to nick goals away from Rio, yet they haven’t managed to turn those moments into wins. Can they do it in Belém? That’s the question. Given what we’ve seen, the answer leans no.
Mind you, there’s enough going on in Vasco’s games to keep the Remo back line busy. Their recent matches have been open, and the goalless draw in Argentina came with a red card to Maximiliano Puig in the 78th minute, which is another reminder that discipline and game management still need work. They’re not a side that quietly sees games out. They tend to be pulled into the contest, and that often creates chances at both ends. For betting purposes, that matters. A lot.
Head-to-Head
These clubs do have a small recent history, and it’s not one-sided. Remo beat Vasco 2-1 at home in August 2021 in Série B, while the meeting in Rio later that year ended 2-2. Go back to the 2016 Copa do Brasil and Vasco edged both legs, 1-0 in Belém and 2-1 at home. So there’s no clear long-term pattern here, but the more recent meetings lean towards competitiveness rather than control.
One detail stands out from those past games: neither side has been able to keep the other quiet with any real consistency. Remo have gone four meetings without a clean sheet against Vasco, while Vasco have conceded in three straight against Remo. That fits the broader feel of this fixture. It usually asks questions at both ends.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 1/2 for this one. Remo aren’t in great shape overall, but at home they’ve been stubborn enough to make this line attractive, and Vasco’s away record doesn’t offer enough reassurance. The visitors are still winless on the road in league play, while Remo have already shown they can handle a stronger opponent at home when they beat Bahia 4-1.
The numbers make this feel like a game Remo can avoid losing even if they don’t fully dominate it. Their recent xG against Grêmio was strong, and Vasco keep giving up chances on their travels. A 2-1 home win is the cleanest scoreline read, though a draw wouldn’t shock anyone. If you wanted a slightly more adventurous angle, both teams to score has some appeal too — but the safer route is Remo or the draw.