Last updated 17 April 2026. SD Eibar host Huesca at Ipurua on Sunday 19 April, and as we move into the final stretch of the La Liga 2 season, the gap between these two sides in the table reflects something more meaningful than a run of results. It reflects a structural difference in how these squads have been built and how they set up week to week. This preview has been updated with near-final odds, the latest squad information, and form from last weekend.
Where the Teams Stand
Eibar sit eighth in La Liga 2 with 40 goals scored and 31 conceded. That goal difference of plus nine is a reasonable platform, and it tells you something about the balance in their play. They are not a side that chases games recklessly. They have enough structure defensively to stay competitive and enough movement in the final third to cause problems.
Huesca are twentieth. They have scored 35 times this season, which is not a catastrophic attacking return, but they have conceded 53. That is a goals-against figure that points to systemic problems at the back rather than a run of bad luck. Watch this number carefully. Fifty-three goals conceded across a season does not happen because of individual errors alone. That is a coaching issue. Something in the defensive structure, the trigger lines, the way the shape compresses or fails to compress, has been consistently wrong.
The Thing Nobody Is Talking About
The conversation around this match will focus on Huesca's relegation situation and the pressure they are under. That framing is understandable but it misses the more useful question, which is: what pattern has produced 53 goals against, and does Eibar's game plan expose it?
Rewind to how mid-table La Liga 2 sides tend to approach bottom-half opponents at home. The reference point for Eibar will be transition. When a side concedes at the rate Huesca have, you typically find that their defensive shape takes too long to organise after losing the ball. The trigger for pressing is either too early or too late, and the gaps between lines open up at the wrong moments. A structured home side with clear movement patterns and patient build-up will find those gaps repeatedly.
Eibar's 31 goals conceded suggests they do not leave themselves open in the same way. Their defensive preparation looks more considered. If they manage the game intelligently, they should be able to control the tempo and deny Huesca the kind of loose, transition-based moments that might suit a side needing to chase a result.
Set Pieces as a Lever
When a defensive unit is structurally inconsistent in open play, the problems rarely disappear at set pieces. In fact, they often get worse. Organisation from corners and free kicks requires the same concentration and reference point discipline that a leaky backline has already shown it struggles to maintain.
Eibar at home, with 40 goals from the season suggesting a functional attacking unit, will have prepared their set-piece delivery with Huesca's shape in mind. The detail in that preparation matters. A side that has conceded 53 times has given opponents plenty of footage to work from. Watch the near-post movement from Eibar at any set piece situation. That is often where the preparation pays off against a disorganised defensive block.
Huesca's Position and What It Means Tactically
Being twentieth in the division with games running out creates a specific tactical problem. Huesca need points, which means they probably cannot afford to set up purely to contain. But their squad, based on what the season's numbers show, does not have the defensive solidity to sit in a low block effectively either. They are caught between two approaches, and that uncertainty tends to produce a shape that is neither compact enough to defend nor aggressive enough to threaten.
Eibar will be aware of this. A game plan built around patience, keeping the ball through the thirds, and waiting for Huesca's shape to open up is the logical approach for the home side. There is no need for Eibar to take risks. The structural advantage is already theirs.
Odds and Market Assessment
Near-final prices have Eibar as clear favourites to win this match, which is consistent with the table positions and the underlying numbers. The home win market reflects the combination of home advantage, a nine-goal positive difference for Eibar, and a Huesca side that has conceded more than half a century of goals this season.
The markets I find most interesting here are the ones that reward structural analysis rather than just backing the favourite. Eibar to keep a clean sheet is worth considering. A side that has scored 35 times this season is not toothless, but if Eibar's defensive pattern holds and Huesca's attacking movement is as limited as the season suggests, the conditions for a clean sheet are present.
The first goalscorer from a set piece is another market with value in this context. Given Huesca's vulnerability in organised defensive situations and Eibar's preparation at home, the probability of a set-piece goal is higher than a standard market price might account for.
Squad and Team News
No significant squad announcements have altered the expected picture for either side as of this update. Both clubs are expected to name their strongest available selections, with Huesca unlikely to rotate given the urgency of their league position. Eibar have no reported disruptions that would change the structural picture outlined above.
Final Assessment
This match sets up clearly in Eibar's favour. The gap in goals conceded, 31 against 53, is the number that underpins everything. It is not just a reflection of results. It is a reflection of preparation, pattern, and structural consistency over a full season. Eibar have shown they can defend without overcommitting. Huesca have shown, repeatedly, that their defensive structure breaks down.
At Ipurua on Sunday, with a home crowd and a game plan built around controlled movement and set-piece preparation, Eibar have every reason to approach this with quiet confidence. The detail will decide the margin, but the structure already points in one direction.


