Almería 4-2 Mirandés: A Six-Goal Finale That Tells a Familiar Story About Two Sides Going Nowhere
Almería signed off their La Liga 2 season with a convincing 4-2 home win over Mirandés, a result that flattered neither side's underlying position in the table but at least gave the Estadio de los Juegos Mediterráneos something to cheer about on the final day.

There is a version of this result that people will describe as a cracking end-of-season encounter, six goals, end-to-end football, nothing to play for so everyone just went at it. And there is some truth in that framing. But the interesting thing is what a 4-2 scoreline in a match between an 11th-placed and a team finishing even lower in La Liga 2 actually tells us about both sides when you strip away the occasion and look at the structural picture underneath.
Almería finished 11th. Their final record reads 14 wins, 7 draws, and 14 defeats across 35 recorded matches, with 42 goals scored and 55 conceded. That goal difference of minus 13 is not the profile of a team with genuine promotion ambitions. It is the profile of a team that creates enough to stay relevant but cannot maintain defensive shape consistently enough to translate that into results across a full campaign.
What the Season-Long Numbers Actually Show
The standing data gives us a useful baseline here. Almería's home record, which is the only split data available for the lower half of the table, shows 11 wins, 2 draws, and 4 losses at home. That is a genuinely strong home return, 25 goals scored and only 18 conceded in those matches, which means their defensive fragility is much more pronounced on the road. Away from the Estadio de los Juegos Mediterráneos they managed just 3 wins, 5 draws, and 10 defeats, conceding 37 goals in the process.
That split tells you quite a lot about their structural shape. At home they clearly press with more intensity and the build-up is more aggressive, which suits their attacking players and generates chances. Away, when they cannot set the tempo in the same way, the defensive organisation breaks down. A goal difference of minus 13 despite a healthy home attacking output points to a team whose pressing triggers are effective in one context but not transferable across different environments. That is a coaching problem as much as a personnel one.
Mirandés and the Away Form Problem
Mirandés, meanwhile, arrive in this fixture with an away record that needs no decoration. Three wins, five draws, and ten defeats on the road, conceding 37 goals away from home. They are a team built around their home shape and their away performances have been structurally thin all season. A side that concedes nearly two goals per away game over a 38-match sample is not unlucky. That is a consistent defensive vulnerability in transition, and it is exactly the kind of underlying weakness that a decent home side can exploit.
So when Almería scored four at home against a side with those away defensive numbers, the result is far less surprising than the occasion might suggest. The interesting thing is not that Almería won. It is that Mirandés still managed to score twice, which points back to the same home defensive inconsistency that has cost Almería points all season. Even in a comfortable win, they gave up two goals at home. Their home goals-against column shows 18 in those 17 home matches, which is not catastrophic but is softer than a side pushing for the top six can afford.
The Signal and What It Got Right
The pre-match signal on this fixture backed the draw at 4.60 with a model probability of 22.2 percent against an implied probability of 21.7 percent. The edge there was marginal, only 0.5 percent, and the confidence rating was 25 out of 100. That is a signal the model itself was not particularly committed to, and looking at the season-long data it is not difficult to see why a draw looked plausible on paper. Both sides had reasonable draw tallies across the season, and neither had anything structural to play for.
But what the model did flag correctly was the over 2.5 goals expectation, which it put at 56 percent probability. Six goals in the final result validates that read entirely. When you have a home side with 42 goals scored across the season and an away side conceding 37 on the road, the structural conditions for a high-scoring game are present. The match result signal lost, but the underlying goals logic was sound. That distinction matters when you are tracking model performance over a sample size that means anything.
Where Both Clubs Go From Here
The more significant question for both clubs is what the full season picture demands in terms of squad rebuild. Almería's minus 13 goal difference at 11th suggests they are structurally a mid-table La Liga 2 side right now. Their home form gives them a platform, but until the away defensive shape improves, they will keep cycling through similar final positions. The build-up going forward is clearly there. The progressive structure they need to manage games away from home is not.
Mirandés finishing below them tells a similar story. Three away wins from 19 attempts is not a promotion challenge template. If their ownership wants to push into the top six next season, the away defensive structure is where the work needs to happen, because the home numbers are clearly more respectable and suggest the underlying quality exists. It just does not travel.
A six-goal game between two mid-table sides on the final day of the season is the kind of result people remember as fun. What the data actually shows is two teams with very similar structural problems, strong enough at home to be dangerous, not disciplined enough away to be serious contenders. Almería won this one comfortably, and that matters for supporters. But 11th place is 11th place regardless of how the final afternoon played out, and the underlying numbers tell you exactly why.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where did Almería finish in La Liga 2 this season?
Almería finished 11th in La Liga 2, recording 14 wins, 7 draws, and 14 defeats with a goal difference of minus 13. Their home form was considerably stronger than their away record across the campaign.
What was the pre-match betting signal for Almería vs Mirandés?
The model flagged the draw at odds of 4.60, with a model probability of 22.2 percent against an implied probability of 21.7 percent. The signal lost, but the model's separate assessment of over 2.5 goals at 56 percent probability proved accurate given the 4-2 final scoreline.
Why did Mirandés concede so many goals away from home this season?
Based on the season-long data, Mirandés managed only 3 away wins from their road fixtures and conceded 37 goals away from home. This points to a consistent structural weakness in their defensive shape during away matches, particularly in transition, rather than individual errors or misfortune.
