FC Andorra vs Albacete Prediction, Odds & Tips
FC Andorra vs Albacete Prediction and Tips
FC Andorra fell to Albacete 0-1 in La Liga 2, a result that caught our model off guard. We had backed an Andorra win at 47% probability, and the pick did not land. Andorra arrived in strong form with two wins in their last five matches, yet could not break through against a visiting side that managed a clean sheet. The hosts failed to generate the attacking threat required to trouble Albacete's defence on the day. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Albacete vs FC Andorra Prediction, Odds and Betting Tips
Our AI analyses form, head-to-head records, squad news and odds to provide data-driven predictions for Albacete vs FC Andorra. All tips are for informational purposes only and do not constitute betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You must be 18 or over to gamble. Please gamble responsibly. For help, visit GambleAware.
Our pick
FC Andorra to win
Result
AND v ALB
AI Prediction Result
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Goals, Balance, and a Promotion Picture in Flux: FC Andorra vs Albacete Preview
Marcus Vale · 17 April 2026
There is a particular type of fixture in the second tier of Spanish football that gets overlooked because neither side is dominating headlines. FC Andorra, sitting ninth in La Liga 2, host Albacete on Friday 1 May 2026, and on the surface this looks like a mid-table meeting of modest consequence. The interesting thing is that when you look at what the goal tallies on both sides actually tell you, there is considerably more to unpick here than a casual glance at the league table would suggest.
Where Both Sides Stand
FC Andorra occupy ninth place with 51 goals scored and 47 conceded across the season. Albacete sit five places below them in fourteenth, with 44 goals scored and 47 conceded. That defensive figure, 47 goals against, is identical for both clubs, which is a genuinely striking coincidence and tells you something meaningful about the structural similarities in how these teams have performed over the course of the campaign.
What separates them is the attacking output. Andorra have generated seven more goals than Albacete this season, which over a full Segunda División campaign represents a meaningful gap in offensive efficiency. That is not a rounding difference. Seven goals in this division is the difference between play-off football and a relegation battle, which means Andorra's ability to convert pressure into goals has been the primary driver of their superior league position. Albacete have been equally leaky at the back but have not compensated with the same volume of attacking returns.
The Goal Data and What It Actually Means on the Pitch
Both teams conceding 47 goals in a season in the second division of Spanish football suggests that neither backline has been particularly disciplined in its defensive shape. A goals-against figure in that range tends to reflect one of two things: either a side is consistently exposed in transition, meaning the defensive structure breaks down quickly when possession is lost, or the build-up phase is leaving the centre of the pitch too open, inviting opponents to progress through central channels with relatively little resistance.
For Albacete, the concern is compounded by the fact that their 44 goals scored has not been enough to offset those defensive numbers. The interesting thing about their position in the table is that they are not a dramatically worse side than Andorra in terms of raw goal difference. Andorra sit at plus four. Albacete sit at minus three. That is a gap of seven, which connects directly back to Andorra's superior scoring record. It is not a gulf. It is a margin, and margins in the second half of a season can close quickly.
Friday Night Context
A Friday evening fixture in May carries its own particular weight in a promotion and relegation battle. Andorra in ninth are likely within reach of the play-off positions, though the exact gap would depend on results around them. Albacete in fourteenth are probably more focused on securing their status for next season than chasing an unlikely late run at the top six. That difference in motivation and pressure can affect how teams approach the game structurally, and it is worth considering when thinking about how both managers might set up.
The team with more to lose in a conservative sense is Andorra. A side pushing for play-off football at home should, in theory, be pressing the game forward and trying to exploit their superior scoring record. Their 51 goals from open play suggests they are capable of producing progressive, attacking football at this level. The question is whether they can do it against a side that, despite its league position, has only conceded the same number of goals as they have.
The Defensive Parity Problem
Here is where I think the popular read on this game may be slightly off. Because Albacete are five places lower in the table and carry less attacking output, the assumption might be that Andorra will have this relatively straightforward at home. What the data actually shows is that Albacete's defence has been just as tested and has held up just as often as Andorra's. The 47 goals conceded figure is not a mark of a team that is being overrun. It is a mark of a team that has been roughly as vulnerable at the back as their opponents on Friday night.
This means Andorra's attacking record, impressive as it is, will be tested against a defensive unit that has shown it can compete at this level across a full season's sample size. The idea that Andorra simply overpower Albacete at home because of a five-place gap in the table is not well supported by the goal data.
What to Watch For
The shape of the game will likely be determined by how both sides manage the transition moments. Given that 47 goals against on both sides points to vulnerability when defensive structure is exposed, the team that wins the pressing battle in the middle third of the pitch will almost certainly create the better chances. If Andorra can establish a high press and force Albacete into hurried build-up, their superior goal-scoring record suggests they have the attacking players to punish mistakes. If Albacete can play through that press and reach Andorra's backline in transition, the home defence's record suggests they are not immune to being hurt.
The goal data also points towards this being a match where both sides score. When two teams have each conceded 47 times in a season, the historical pattern in league football is that neither backline has the consistency to shut a game out when the opposition is pushing forward with purpose. Both teams scoring in this fixture would be entirely consistent with what the numbers across the season have shown.
This is a game that deserves more attention than a mid-table clash typically receives. The structural similarities are real, the attacking quality in Andorra's favour is genuine, and the defensive frailties on both sides are documented. And that makes it interesting.
Read full preview
There is a particular type of fixture in the second tier of Spanish football that gets overlooked because neither side is dominating headlines. FC Andorra, sitting ninth in La Liga 2, host Albacete on Friday 1 May 2026, and on the surface this looks like a mid-table meeting of modest consequence. The interesting thing is that when you look at what the goal tallies on both sides actually tell you, there is considerably more to unpick here than a casual glance at the league table would suggest.
Where Both Sides Stand
FC Andorra occupy ninth place with 51 goals scored and 47 conceded across the season. Albacete sit five places below them in fourteenth, with 44 goals scored and 47 conceded. That defensive figure, 47 goals against, is identical for both clubs, which is a genuinely striking coincidence and tells you something meaningful about the structural similarities in how these teams have performed over the course of the campaign.
What separates them is the attacking output. Andorra have generated seven more goals than Albacete this season, which over a full Segunda División campaign represents a meaningful gap in offensive efficiency. That is not a rounding difference. Seven goals in this division is the difference between play-off football and a relegation battle, which means Andorra's ability to convert pressure into goals has been the primary driver of their superior league position. Albacete have been equally leaky at the back but have not compensated with the same volume of attacking returns.
The Goal Data and What It Actually Means on the Pitch
Both teams conceding 47 goals in a season in the second division of Spanish football suggests that neither backline has been particularly disciplined in its defensive shape. A goals-against figure in that range tends to reflect one of two things: either a side is consistently exposed in transition, meaning the defensive structure breaks down quickly when possession is lost, or the build-up phase is leaving the centre of the pitch too open, inviting opponents to progress through central channels with relatively little resistance.
For Albacete, the concern is compounded by the fact that their 44 goals scored has not been enough to offset those defensive numbers. The interesting thing about their position in the table is that they are not a dramatically worse side than Andorra in terms of raw goal difference. Andorra sit at plus four. Albacete sit at minus three. That is a gap of seven, which connects directly back to Andorra's superior scoring record. It is not a gulf. It is a margin, and margins in the second half of a season can close quickly.
Friday Night Context
A Friday evening fixture in May carries its own particular weight in a promotion and relegation battle. Andorra in ninth are likely within reach of the play-off positions, though the exact gap would depend on results around them. Albacete in fourteenth are probably more focused on securing their status for next season than chasing an unlikely late run at the top six. That difference in motivation and pressure can affect how teams approach the game structurally, and it is worth considering when thinking about how both managers might set up.
The team with more to lose in a conservative sense is Andorra. A side pushing for play-off football at home should, in theory, be pressing the game forward and trying to exploit their superior scoring record. Their 51 goals from open play suggests they are capable of producing progressive, attacking football at this level. The question is whether they can do it against a side that, despite its league position, has only conceded the same number of goals as they have.
The Defensive Parity Problem
Here is where I think the popular read on this game may be slightly off. Because Albacete are five places lower in the table and carry less attacking output, the assumption might be that Andorra will have this relatively straightforward at home. What the data actually shows is that Albacete's defence has been just as tested and has held up just as often as Andorra's. The 47 goals conceded figure is not a mark of a team that is being overrun. It is a mark of a team that has been roughly as vulnerable at the back as their opponents on Friday night.
This means Andorra's attacking record, impressive as it is, will be tested against a defensive unit that has shown it can compete at this level across a full season's sample size. The idea that Andorra simply overpower Albacete at home because of a five-place gap in the table is not well supported by the goal data.
What to Watch For
The shape of the game will likely be determined by how both sides manage the transition moments. Given that 47 goals against on both sides points to vulnerability when defensive structure is exposed, the team that wins the pressing battle in the middle third of the pitch will almost certainly create the better chances. If Andorra can establish a high press and force Albacete into hurried build-up, their superior goal-scoring record suggests they have the attacking players to punish mistakes. If Albacete can play through that press and reach Andorra's backline in transition, the home defence's record suggests they are not immune to being hurt.
The goal data also points towards this being a match where both sides score. When two teams have each conceded 47 times in a season, the historical pattern in league football is that neither backline has the consistency to shut a game out when the opposition is pushing forward with purpose. Both teams scoring in this fixture would be entirely consistent with what the numbers across the season have shown.
This is a game that deserves more attention than a mid-table clash typically receives. The structural similarities are real, the attacking quality in Andorra's favour is genuine, and the defensive frailties on both sides are documented. And that makes it interesting.
AND
FC Andorra dominated possession and created chances, posting 3.00 xG, yet failed to convert in a 0-1 defeat. The result snapped a four-match winning streak that had seen them score 16 goals across those games. Their clean sheet record, previously immaculate at 100 percent, was broken by a single Albacete finish. Despite ranking ninth in the table, the loss marked a sharp reversal of recent form.
ALB
Albacete secured a narrow 1-0 victory despite generating just 2.00 xG, continuing their inconsistent campaign with one win in five matches. The away side's defensive solidity proved decisive; they maintained a clean sheet to improve their 50 percent clean sheets percentage. The result represented their second win in five games, though they remain 13th in the standings.
Run-in & context
The defeat dropped FC Andorra's recent momentum, halting their ascent after four consecutive victories. Albacete's win offered respite from a difficult run but did little to alter their league position materially. The result illustrated how our model tracks variance between expected and actual output; Andorra's 3.00 xG without reward highlighted clinical finishing as a deciding factor in La Liga 2's tight midfield battle.
Injury impact
AND have a near-full squad available.
ALB are missing 2 players ruled out, including Higinio Marín, Edward Cedeño.
Venue
Venue to be confirmed.
Weather
Weather data unavailable for this venue.
Set pieces
- FC AndorraUnavailable
- AlbaceteUnavailable
Match Probabilities
Full-Time Result
Both Teams to Score
Over/Under 2.5 Goals
Goals Markets
More Markets
Double Chance
Half-Time Result
BTTS in Both Halves
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Match Centre
Lineups, live stats, full odds comparison, and in-depth match data for Albacete vs FC Andorra.
SSR Ratings & Movement
| Metric | ||
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 1571-20.3 | 1577+20.3 |
| Attack | 1559-10.8 | 1558+0.8 |
| Defence | 1490-1.8 | 1519+11.8 |
| Goals Index | 1671-4.5 | 1467-15.4 |
| BTTS Index | 1717-2.6 | 1413-17.4 |
📝 Post-Match Analysis
Albacete Stun FC Andorra with 1-0 Win to Keep Promotion Hopes Alive
Albacete produced a composed away performance to defeat FC Andorra 1-0 in La Liga 2, a result that carried genuine significance in a tightly contested promotion picture. The win justified a model that...
Form Guide (Last 5)
Head-to-Head
1 meetings| Market | Count | Rate | Streak |
|---|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes) | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Over 2.5 | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Over 1.5 | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Under 2.5 | 1/1 | 100% | 1 |
| ALB Clean Sheet | 1/1 | 100% | 1 |
| AND Clean Sheet | 0/1 | 0% | - |
Match History
Frequently Asked Questions
Up next at this ground or for these teams
- Sun 31 May, 17:30Burgos vs FC AndorraLa Liga 2Home side
Curious how this prediction was produced? See our methodology.
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All predictions and analysis on this page are provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Odds displayed are sourced from third-party bookmakers and are subject to change. SportSignals may receive commission from bookmaker links on this page.
Last updated 11 minutes ago ·


