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Can Real Betis’ counter-attacking threat disrupt Real Madrid’s Bernabéu control to start 2026? Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
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Watford are unbeaten in 10 home league games and have won four straight in the Championship. Their 51% possession and high shot volume (13.8/gm) provide a consistent attacking threat that Millwall’s 45% possession style struggles to suppress.
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Millwall’s away games are low-scoring affairs (Under 2.5 in the last four). Watford are efficient at home, and their ability to exploit Millwall's weakness against wing-based attacks suggests a multi-goal margin is probable.
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Real Madrid vs Real Betis Predictions and Best Bets
Real Madrid vs Real Betis — bet365 Market Snapshot
Swipe through key markets with illustrative probabilities and sample bet365 odds based on our match analysis.
As the chasing side in the title race, Real Madrid enter as clear favorites at the Bernabéu against a competitive top-six Real Betis side.
With Madrid’s massive shot volume and Betis’ elite counter-attacking profile, markets lean toward both sides contributing to the tally.
- Volume and output at the top: Real Madrid have 36 goals in 18 La Liga matches and average 19.4 shots per game, showing how sustained pressure drives their chance creation.
- Betis bring goals and shots too: Real Betis have scored 29 league goals in 17 matches while averaging 15 shots per game, backing up their profile as a proactive attacking side.
- Two elite creators in white: Kylian Mbappé has 18 league goals and four assists, while Vinícius Júnior has five goals and five assists, giving Madrid both finishing and final-ball quality.
Attacking Intensity: Dangerous Attacks Per Game
The frequency with which each side reaches the final third highlights Madrid’s dominance in creating offensive field position.
Their total of 1,622 dangerous attacks reflects a style built on controlling the game in the opposition’s half and taking high shot volumes.
Betis are more selective, relying on clinical counter-attacks and elite wing play to generate their 29 league goals.
Offensive Volume: Average Shots per Match
Madrid’s offensive philosophy results in massive volumes, while Betis maintain a high baseline for a top-six side.
With almost 20 shots per game, Madrid’s pressure is constant, leading to their 36-goal season tally so far.
Antony individually contributes 3.4 shots per match, underlining Betis’ intent to hurt teams whenever space opens up.
Real Madrid start 2026 back at the Bernabéu, with Real Betis arriving in town on Sunday afternoon for a La Liga fixture that carries its own little edge. The league picture is already neatly framed: Madrid are second, four points behind leaders Barcelona, while Betis sit sixth and have a five-point cushion over seventh-placed Celta Vigo.
That positioning matters because it shapes what each side can reasonably aim to impose on the match. Madrid, with Barcelona in view, don’t have the luxury of drifting through a home game. Betis, meanwhile, arrive as a top-six side who’ve been productive going forward this season, and they’ve got enough in their profile to suggest they won’t come to Madrid simply to take part.
There’s recent history between the two that hints at a fixture where neither side expects it to be comfortable. Betis beat Madrid 2-1 on 1 March 2025, while Madrid won 2-0 in the reverse meeting on 1 September 2024. Two of the last six league meetings listed ended 0-0 and 1-1, too. So even with the table gap, this has a feel of a match that can switch between chess and chaos, sometimes within the same passage of play.
Madrid’s own last run across competitions is a mixed bag for mood: victories away at Athletic Club (3-0) and Deportivo Alavés (2-1), plus a 2-0 home win over Sevilla, sit alongside defeats at home to Celta Vigo (2-0) and Manchester City (2-1). Betis, for their part, have been scoring freely in places — a 4-0 win over Getafe and a 3-1 win away at Dinamo Zagreb stand out — with a 0-0 draw at Rayo Vallecano in among it. It sets up a proper test of rhythm: Madrid’s ability to control and create, and Betis’ ability to hurt teams when the game opens.
Team News and Likely Set-Ups
Real Madrid’s possible starting line-up has Thibaut Courtois in goal, with Valverde, Huijsen, Rüdiger and Carreras across the back. The midfield trio listed is Bellingham, Tchouaméni and Güler, with Rodrygo and Vinícius Júnior either side of a central forward in G Garcia.
That selection points to Madrid leaning into control and chance creation through their technical base. Tchouaméni as the deeper organiser, Bellingham as the runner who can arrive late or lead the press, and Güler as a link between midfield and the front line is a structure built to play in the opposition half. The presence of Valverde in the back line also hints at a side comfortable stepping into midfield zones in possession, while Carreras’ left-sided role fits Madrid’s listed tendency to attack down the left.
Betis’ possible XI suggests a clear 4-2-3-1 structure, consistent with their formation summary (4-2-3-1 used 17 times). Valles is named in goal; Bellerín, Natan, Bartra and Gómez form the defence; Deossa and Roca sit as a double pivot; Antony, Fornals and Ruibal play behind Hernández.
That gives Betis a front four packed with output. Hernández has seven La Liga goals and three assists. Fornals has four goals and four assists. Antony has five goals and two assists, and he also averages 3.4 shots per game — a figure that hints at a winger who doesn’t just create, but finishes moves too. If you’re trying to picture how Betis hurt teams, that trio behind Hernández gives you the answer: they can carry, combine, or hit early shots when the space is there.
In terms of absences, Madrid’s injury and suspension list includes Éder Gabriel Militão (muscle injury), Trent Alexander-Arnold (muscle tear), Dani Carvajal Ramos (knee injury), and B. Abdelkader Diaz (called up to national team). Militão appears in Madrid’s squad list with strong minutes and a 7.16 rating; Alexander-Arnold and Carvajal appear too, so those are defensive options that reduce rotation choices at the back. Betis, by contrast, have no injury list shown here.
How the Match Could Be Played
This is a clash of two sides who both like having the ball high up the pitch — and both have a vulnerability that can make that preference feel risky.
Madrid’s style notes are almost a mission statement: control the game in the opposition’s half, short passes, attempt through balls often, possession football, take a lot of shots, and attack down the left. Their strengths lean heavily into that identity: very strong at creating scoring chances, very strong at creating chances through individual skill, and very strong at stealing the ball from the opposition. It’s the classic pattern: win it back quickly, move it cleanly, and keep the opponent facing their own goal.
Betis’ profile, though, suggests they’re not a passive visitor. They’re very strong on counter attacks, very strong attacking down the wings, and very strong at coming back from losing positions. Their style also includes attempting through balls often, taking a lot of shots, and attacking down the left, plus playing an offside trap. In other words, they have their own methods of being dangerous, and they’re comfortable playing quickly when the moment appears.
So where does the tactical battle live? In the spaces either side of Madrid’s midfield trio, and in the channels behind Betis’ wide attacking players.
With Bellingham, Tchouaméni and Güler, Madrid can form triangles around the ball and keep shifting Betis from side to side. That’s especially important because Betis are only listed with one weakness — defending against skilful players. Against a Madrid side whose strengths include chance creation through individual skill, that’s a big flashing sign. It suggests that if Madrid can isolate a defender, force a 1v1, and then add a runner beyond it, they can create the kind of broken defensive line that turns neat possession into a clear chance.
Vinícius fits that story perfectly, not because of reputation, but because the numbers here show he’s producing: five goals and five assists in the league, plus a 7.31 rating. If Madrid load the left, Carreras can provide the width and Vinícius can attack inside, or vice versa. Bellingham’s role becomes the question-mark runner: does he arrive at the far post, or does he occupy the half-space to create a passing lane for a through ball?
Betis can respond by leaning into what they do best: turning defence into attack quickly. Their counter-attacking strength and wing focus points to a simple route: win it, find Fornals or Antony early, and look for Hernández’s movement. Antony’s shot volume hints he’s happy to finish moves from distance or after a quick combination. Fornals, with four assists, is the more obvious connector — the player who can carry the ball into a zone where Hernández can be found with a through pass.
And here’s where Madrid’s weaknesses enter the picture. Madrid are rated weak at stopping opponents from creating chances, and weak at defending against through-ball attacks. Against a Betis team whose style includes attempting through balls often, that’s not background noise; it’s the potential plot twist. If Betis can tempt Madrid into stepping high and then slip an early pass into Hernández, the visitors can turn one transition into a chance even if they’ve barely seen the ball for five minutes.
Betis’ use of an offside trap adds spice. Madrid attempt through balls often and have very strong individual skill creation. That can expose an offside line if timing is slightly off. It can also lead to frustrating moments if Madrid’s runners go too early and Betis’ line holds. That duel — timing versus organisation — might decide whether this feels like a Madrid siege or a game of sudden exchanges.
Set pieces could be a quieter but important theme. Madrid are strong at attacking set pieces and strong at defending set pieces. Betis aren’t flagged as weak there, but with Madrid’s aerial structure — Tchouaméni leads their aerials won list at 2.7 per match — those situations can still be part of how Madrid maintain pressure and keep Betis pinned.
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The Numbers That Support the Story
Madrid’s league output is enormous in volume and strong in return. They’ve scored 36 goals in 18 La Liga matches and average 19.4 shots per game. That shot figure matters because it supports the idea of Madrid building pressure through repeated entries into the final third, rather than waiting for the perfect opening. It’s sustained, wave-after-wave football.
Betis are no strangers to attacking volume either. They’ve scored 29 in 17 league matches and average 15 shots per game. That matters because it suggests Betis can arrive at the Bernabéu with genuine attacking intent, not just the hope of a single moment. Their goal return also points to a side capable of finishing when chances come, which fits the “finishing scoring chances” strength.
Possession and passing tell you how Madrid will try to control the day. Madrid average 58.9% possession in La Liga with 89.3% pass accuracy. Betis are at 50.0% possession and 84.1% pass accuracy. That gap suggests Madrid can keep the ball longer and in more advanced areas — and their “control the game in the opposition’s half” style line backs that up.
The attack patterns show up in the “dangerous attacks” totals too. Madrid average 64.88 dangerous attacks per game (1622 total in this overall sample), while Betis are at 48.5 (1261 total). In plain terms, Madrid are getting to threatening zones more often. The question is whether those moments become clear shots in the box, or end up as blocked efforts and recycled possession.
At the top end, Madrid’s standout number is blunt: Kylian Mbappé has 18 league goals and four assists, averaging 4.9 shots per game with an 8.04 rating. Notably, he isn’t listed in the possible starting XI, which makes the central finishing responsibility feel more open. Betis’ standout in the XI is Hernández on seven goals and three assists; that’s a clear reference point for how their attacks can end, especially if Madrid’s through-ball defence is tested.
Key “Moments” to Watch
Watch the first fifteen minutes for the tone of Madrid’s press and Betis’ bravery. Madrid are very strong at stealing the ball from the opposition, and that can show up as a series of recoveries that keep Betis boxed in. If that happens, Betis will need to find an early out-ball — and the most natural candidates are Antony and Fornals, because both have the end product to turn one carry into something meaningful.
Watch the offside-line duel. Betis play the offside trap; Madrid attempt through balls often. That’s either a recipe for quick breaks or for repeated whistles that kill Madrid’s rhythm. The detail will be the timing of runs from Rodrygo, Vinícius, and Bellingham’s late arrivals.
Watch the space behind Madrid’s midfield on turnovers. Betis are very strong on counter attacks, and Madrid are weak against through-ball attacks. If Betis can win it and immediately find Hernández in a channel, they can force Courtois into action even in spells where Madrid dominate the ball.
And then, keep a close eye on the finishing theme. Madrid’s volume is huge, but the match can still hinge on whether the final ball is clean and whether shots are taken from the right spots. Betis, meanwhile, have attackers who shoot plenty — Antony averages 3.4 shots per game — so a spell of Madrid dominance doesn’t remove the threat of a sudden Betis strike.
What could go wrong with this read? Madrid’s dominance in possession can sometimes mask a vulnerability: if one pass is loose in the wrong zone, Betis’ counter-attacking strength can turn the match into a track meet. On the flip side, Betis’ willingness to play an offside trap can backfire if Madrid’s timing is right and the first through ball lands perfectly. It’s a match where the margins on a single run could matter as much as the overall flow.
Best Bet for Real Madrid vs Real Betis
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Both Teams to Score (Yes)
Real Madrid and Real Betis enter this fixture as two of the most productive attacking units in the current campaign, and the tactical configuration of both sides suggests a game where neither defense will find it easy to maintain a clean sheet. Real Madrid have been prolific, netting 36 goals in 18 matches, which translates to exactly two goals per game. Their approach is defined by sustained pressure and high volume, as evidenced by an average of 19.4 shots per league match. With Vinícius Júnior contributing five goals and five assists, and a technical midfield capable of creating scoring chances through individual skill, the home side consistently finds ways to penetrate opposing lines.
However, the hosts are far from impenetrable. They are currently flagged as having significant defensive vulnerabilities, specifically being rated as weak at stopping opponents from creating chances and weak at defending against through-ball attacks. These specific weaknesses play directly into the strengths of Real Betis. The visitors are very strong on counter-attacks and have a clear tactical preference for attempting through balls often. With Hernández leading their line on seven goals and Fornals providing a creative link with four goals and four assists, Betis possess the specific tools to exploit the spaces Madrid leaves when they commit numbers forward in their pursuit of possession.
Furthermore, Betis are no mere participants in the attacking phase; they average 15 shots per match and have scored 29 goals in 17 league games. Their ability to score away from home is highlighted by recent results, such as a 3-1 victory in Zagreb. Recent history between these two also supports a competitive scoring environment, with two of the last six meetings ending in 1-1 and 2-1 results. Given Madrid’s overwhelming shot volume and Betis’ elite counter-attacking efficiency against a vulnerable through-ball defense, both goalkeepers are likely to be tested frequently throughout the afternoon.
What could go wrong The primary risk to this selection is a highly tactical opening where the offside trap employed by Real Betis successfully stifles Madrid’s rhythm, leading to a cagey, low-scoring first half. Additionally, if Real Madrid’s very strong ability to steal the ball from the opposition results in total dominance of the midfield, they could potentially starve the Betis attackers of the service needed to launch their dangerous counter-attacks.
Correct score lean
Real Madrid to win 2-1
A 2-1 victory for Real Madrid aligns with the statistical trends and tactical profiles of both clubs. Madrid average two goals per game and possess a high shot volume that usually results in multiple breakthroughs at the Bernabéu. Conversely, Betis have scored in the majority of their recent competitive fixtures and possess the counter-attacking strength to exploit a Madrid defense that is specifically weak against through balls. Since Madrid are second in the table and dominant in possession, they are expected to edge the result, but their defensive lapses make a clean sheet unlikely against a top-six side.
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