Santos and Fluminense meet in the Brasileirão Betano on Sunday evening in a game that feels far bigger than the table positions alone would suggest. Santos start the day 15th with 13 points, still looking over their shoulder, while Fluminense sit third with 20 and are trying to stay in touch with the title pace. That’s the contrast: one side chasing stability, the other chasing a serious push at the top.
There’s also a proper Brazilian-elite feel to this one. Santos have Cuca in the dugout and have been scrapping for rhythm across domestic and continental football, while Luis Zubeldia’s Fluminense arrive with the weight of expectation that comes with a club expected to win most weeks. Both teams are also juggling midweek continental commitments, which usually sharpens the edges a bit. Sometimes it helps. Sometimes it just leaves everyone a touch flatter.
For Santos, this is a chance to build on a narrow home win over Atlético Mineiro and keep moving away from danger. For Fluminense, it’s about stopping a patchy run from becoming a real problem. Third in the league sounds neat. Four matches without a win doesn’t. That’s the tension here.
Santos Form & Analysis
Santos’ recent story is one of mixed signs rather than any clear upward or downward collapse. They opened April with a solid 2-0 home win over Remo, then ground out a 0-0 away draw at Cruzeiro. The trip to Flamengo brought a tougher reality check in a 3-1 defeat, though that was followed by a 1-0 home victory over Atlético Mineiro that should’ve lifted the mood. Since then, they’ve drawn 1-1 at home to Recoleta FC in the Sudamericana after taking the lead early through Neymar and then going in level at the break. It’s been a bit uneven. No one can call it boring.
At home in the league, though, Santos have been much more respectable than their overall standing suggests. Three wins, two draws and just one defeat at their ground, with eight goals scored and only five conceded, is a decent platform. They’ve been hard to beat in front of their own crowd, and that matters here because their recent home performances have leaned on control and patience rather than open, end-to-end chaos. The clean-sheet against Atlético Mineiro and the shutout draw at Cruzeiro show there’s a baseline of structure. Still, the occasional flat attacking spell remains, and they’ve only scored more than once in one of their last six across all competitions.
The bigger point is this: Santos tend to start games well and often find a way into them first. That matters against a Fluminense side that’s been loose at times, but Santos don’t always turn good starts into comfortable finishes. Their xG against Recoleta was huge, which tells you they can create plenty at home. Whether they can finish the job against a stronger league opponent is another matter. They’ll need to be sharper than they were in the Sudamericana draw, because Fluminense won’t offer the same margins.
Fluminense Form & Analysis
Fluminense come into this off a disappointing home defeat to Independiente Rivadavia in the Libertadores, and that result fit a broader patch of awkward form. Before that loss, they were beaten 2-1 at home by Flamengo in the league, after drawing 0-0 away to Deportivo La Guaira and 1-1 at Coritiba. You have to go back to the 3-1 home win over Corinthians on 2 April for their last league victory, and that’s the point that stands out most. Four matches without a win is fine for a mid-table side trying to steady itself. For a team sitting third, it’s a warning sign.
The away picture is even less convincing. Fluminense’s league record on the road reads one win, two draws and two defeats, with seven scored and seven conceded, which tells you they’re competitive but not especially reliable. They can score away from home — the numbers are there — yet they’ve also been far too open for a top-three side. Drawing at Coritiba was acceptable, but only just. The 0-0 in Venezuela against Deportivo La Guaira showed they can keep things tight, though that came without much attacking sparkle. So which version turns up in Santos? The one that controls matches, or the one that leaves openings?
That’s the big question. On paper, Fluminense still carry the better overall form line in the league, and 18 goals scored to 13 conceded is healthy enough after 11 rounds. Mind you, their away output hasn’t matched the standing. They’ve got the quality to score here, especially if Santos leave space in transition, but they don’t look like a side who can just stroll into a difficult away fixture and dominate it. If this becomes a scrap, their recent road record says they won’t mind the fight. If it becomes a clean football match, that’s less comfortable for them.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has had a habit of staying tight. The most recent meeting ended 0-0 at Santos in August 2025, and Fluminense beat them 1-0 at home a few months earlier. Go back a little further and the pattern becomes clearer: there were two more 1-0 Fluminense wins in 2023 and 2021, plus a 0-0 in 2022 and a 2-2 draw in Santos earlier that same year. Santos did beat Fluminense 2-0 at home in October 2021, but that feels like the outlier rather than the trend.
The general shape of the rivalry is low-scoring and stubborn. Seven of the last nine meetings have gone under 2.5 goals, and Fluminense are unbeaten in six against Santos. That’s not enough to dictate what happens on Sunday, but it does explain why this matchup often feels tighter than the league table might imply. Neither side tends to give much away easily. Not much room for comfort here.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 for this one. It’s a fair price for a game that should produce chances at both ends without quite exploding into a shootout. Santos have scored in most of their recent home games and looked lively in attack against Atlético Mineiro and Recoleta. Fluminense, for all their stumbles, have scored in several of their recent away fixtures and still carry enough quality to land a goal even when they’re not at their sharpest.
The slight tension is that the head-to-head has often been cagey. That’s true. But the current shape of both teams leans toward each finding a way through. Santos have been more reliable at home than their league position suggests, while Fluminense’s away defence hasn’t exactly been airtight. A 1-1 draw feels right, with both sides getting moments and neither quite having the ruthlessness to pull clear. That’s the scoreline I’d land on.
If you want a different route, under 2.5 goals has obvious appeal given the historical meetings, but BTTS feels the better value on current form. The goals should come. Just not loads of them.