Sevilla welcome Atlético Madrid to the Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán on Saturday evening with the pressure cranked up at both ends of the table. It’s a LaLiga game with very different ambitions attached to it, but no shortage of tension. Sevilla are down in 17th on 31 points, just above the drop line and badly in need of a result after a grim run. Atlético, meanwhile, sit fourth on 57 points and are trying to lock down Champions League qualification while still carrying serious momentum from Europe.
That European context matters here. Diego Simeone’s side head into this one off the back of a huge 2-0 Champions League knockout win away at Barcelona on Wednesday, a result that will have sharpened belief as much as it taxed the legs. Sevilla don’t have that distraction, but right now that’s hardly an advantage on its own. Luis Garcia’s team haven’t won in five league matches and the mood has darkened after defeats to Valencia, Barcelona and then Real Oviedo. Survival fights can get scrappy. This one probably will.
Sevilla’s position is the more desperate. They’ve won only eight of 30 league games and have already conceded 50 goals, which tells you the problem in one line. Atlético’s season has been stronger, if not flawless: 17 wins from 30, 50 scored, only 30 conceded. That’s a side with structure and purpose, even if their away record is less imposing than their overall standing suggests. Sevilla need points. Atlético smell top-four control. That’s enough to make this a proper test for both.
Sevilla Form & Analysis
Sevilla’s recent run reads like a team slipping into trouble. The latest defeat, 1-0 away at Real Oviedo on 5 April, was especially frustrating because it wasn’t one of those days where they were battered from pillar to post. The xG was low on both sides, 0.67 to 0.47 against them, but they failed to register a single shot on target and then made life even harder when Tanguy Nianzou was sent off before half-time. Before that came a 2-0 home loss to Valencia, then a brutal 5-2 defeat away at Barcelona where their defensive issues were laid bare. A 1-1 draw at home to Rayo Vallecano and a 2-2 draw away at Real Betis at least showed some fight, but the pattern is clear enough: they’re too easy to hurt, and they rarely control games for long.
Go back one more and you find their last win, a 1-0 away success at Getafe on 22 February. That feels a long time ago now. Since then it’s been five without a win, and they’ve conceded in each of those matches. That’s the streak that really bites. You can survive while drawing low-scoring games; you usually can’t survive when clean sheets disappear completely. Sevilla have scored in three of their last five, so there is still some life in the attack, but the margin for error is tiny when the back line keeps giving opponents a route in.
Their home record is poor. Very poor. Sevilla are 19th in the home table with just 16 points from 15 league games at the Sánchez-Pizjuán, winning four, drawing four and losing seven. They’ve scored 19 and conceded 22 there, which paints them as neither especially blunt nor especially open in isolation, but the bigger issue is reliability. You just can’t trust them. They’ve lost to Valencia at home recently, drawn with Rayo there, and haven’t turned their own ground into a shield.
Still, there’s a reason the goals angle appeals here. Sevilla’s projected xG for this game sits at 1.37, which is healthy enough against an Atlético side that hasn’t exactly been granite on the road. League-wide home attacking averages are also decent, and Sevilla do create enough territory and enough shots inside the box over a normal match to trouble visiting teams. The problem is obvious: every decent spell tends to be undone by poor defending or bad discipline. That won’t magically vanish against Simeone’s side.
Atlético Madrid Form & Analysis
Atlético arrive in a far better mood, and the headline result is impossible to ignore. Winning 2-0 away at Barcelona in the Champions League knockout stage on Wednesday is the kind of statement that changes the atmosphere around a squad. Mind you, the raw numbers from that match were unusual. Atlético generated only 0.44 xG from five shots, while Barcelona posted 1.09 xG and 17 attempts, but Simeone’s side were ruthless when it mattered. Julián Alvarez struck before the break, Alexander Sørloth added the second, and Barcelona’s red card just before half-time changed the shape of the contest. It was clinical, streetwise, very Atlético.
Their league form before that had been more uneven. They lost 2-1 at home to Barcelona on 4 April, went down 3-2 away to Real Madrid on 22 March, and were beaten 3-2 by Tottenham Hotspur in London in Europe on 18 March despite staying very much alive in the tie. Sandwiched into that run was a solid 1-0 home win over Getafe and, before the trip to Spurs, a wild 5-2 home victory over Tottenham that showed their attacking edge. So what are Atlético right now? Dangerous, absolutely. Totally stable? Not quite. They’ve won three of their last six in all competitions, but they’ve also shipped goals in four of those matches.
That matters because their away league record is respectable rather than dominant. Atlético are seventh in the away table with 17 points from 14 matches, built from four wins, five draws and five defeats. They’ve scored 15 and conceded 16 in those away league games. That is not the away profile of a side you blindly trust at a short price. They tend to stay in matches, yes, and they tend to score first — they’ve done that in six of their last seven overall — but they aren’t steamrolling opponents on the road in LaLiga.
You can see the split in their recent away results too. They lost 3-2 at Real Madrid, lost 3-2 at Tottenham, but then won 2-0 at Barcelona. There’s quality there, and big-game nerve, but also a habit of giving up chances. For this particular fixture, the projected xG of 1.27 looks fair enough. Atlético should create. Sevilla concede too often for them not to. The question is whether Atlético keep the home side out for 90 minutes after a draining European night. I’m not convinced they do.
Head-to-Head
There’s a recent pattern in this fixture, and Sevilla won’t like it. Atlético have won each of the last three competitive meetings, including a 3-0 home victory in November and a 2-1 win in Seville in April last year. They also edged a wild 4-3 game in December 2024. That’s not ancient history. It’s a matchup Atlético have handled well lately.
One angle stands out more than the win sequence, though: Sevilla haven’t kept a clean sheet in the last three meetings. Given their current defensive run, that feels highly relevant. Even when they’ve caused Atlético problems at the other end, they haven’t shut the door.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 1.80 looks the strongest play here. Sevilla are in poor shape, no doubt, but this isn’t a matchup where you need them to suddenly become good — you just need one goal at home against an Atlético side with a middling away defensive record in the league and heavy minutes in their legs after Wednesday. On the other side of it, Atlético should get chances against a Sevilla team without a clean sheet in five and with 50 league goals conceded already.
The projected numbers line up neatly enough at 1.37 xG for Sevilla and 1.27 for Atlético, and that’s why the 1-1 correct-score call makes sense. Atlético are the stronger team and may well start faster, as they often do, but Sevilla’s desperation should force them into the game at some point. You’d expect the home side to create enough pressure, set-pieces and broken-play moments to nick one.
If you wanted a second angle, the draw has some appeal given the score projection and Atlético’s less-than-convincing away league numbers. Still, the cleaner bet is goals at both ends. A 1-1 feels right.