Nacional vs AVS: What the Numbers Reveal About Two Sides Still Finding Their Feet in Liga Portugal
Nacional host bottom-placed AVS in a Liga Portugal fixture that the goals-against columns make fascinating. Two sides with defensive structures that have conceded heavily, and a game that tells you a great deal about where both are in their development.

There are matches that attract attention because of the names on the teamsheet, and there are matches that attract attention because of what the numbers quietly suggest is coming. Nacional versus AVS in portugal" class="entity-link entity-link--league">Liga Portugal falls into the second category. Sit with the data for a moment and the picture that emerges is one of two sides who have been giving goals away at a rate that any coaching staff will find uncomfortable, and who now face each other with very little margin for structural error.
The Defensive Picture Before a Ball Is Kicked
Watch this. Nacional sit 14th in the Liga Portugal table. They have conceded 41 goals and scored 34. That is a goal difference of minus seven, and it tells you that this is a team with enough in the final third to stay competitive, but with a defensive structure that has not been consistent enough to convert that attacking output into points on the board.
Now rewind to AVS. They are 18th, bottom of the table, with 22 goals scored and 65 conceded. That goals-against figure is significant. Sixty-five goals conceded means AVS have been shipping goals at a rate that goes beyond individual mistakes. The thing nobody is talking about is the structural gap between those two defensive records. Nacional have conceded 41. AVS have conceded 65. That is a difference of 24 goals, and in my experience as a coach, a gap that wide between two sides in the same division is rarely about effort or desire. That is a coaching issue. The patterns of how AVS defend, the triggers for their press, the shape they hold in their defensive block, these are the areas that will have been tested repeatedly throughout the season.
What the Goals-Scored Column Tells You
Nacional have scored 34 goals. AVS have scored 22. The gap in attacking output is notable but not as stark as the defensive one, and that is an important distinction. AVS are not a side that has simply shut up shop and tried to absorb pressure. They have attempted to play and create, but the 22 goals they have managed suggests either a lack of cutting edge in the final third, or a pattern of creating without the movement and reference points in the box to consistently convert.
For Nacional, 34 goals from a side sitting 14th is a reasonable return. It suggests there is a game plan in the final third that does generate chances, but that the defensive preparation has not matched it. When a team scores more than it concedes in individual matches yet still sits in 14th, it often means the goals have not been distributed efficiently across the campaign. There will have been high-scoring matches where the attacking structure clicked, and there will have been matches where the defensive shape gave away too much.
The Pattern of a Bottom-Half Fixture
Rewind to what a fixture like this tends to look like at this stage of a season. Nacional, at 14th, have enough of a points cushion above the relegation places to approach this match with a degree of structure and patience. They do not need to throw everything forward. They can be organised, sit in their shape, and trust that their goal-scoring record gives them the tools to find a way through against a side that has conceded 65 times.
AVS, by contrast, are in a position where the pressure of every match is acute. When a side is bottom of the table and has conceded 65 goals, the instinct can be to chase the game, to push more players forward, and to create the kind of open spaces that the opposition can exploit on the counter. Watch this pattern in how the game sets up. If AVS commit numbers forward in search of a goal, Nacional's goal-scoring record suggests they have the players to punish the space left behind.
Set Pieces and the Detail That Matters
The thing nobody is talking about in a fixture between two sides with these defensive records is what happens at set pieces. When a team has conceded 65 goals in a single campaign, there will almost certainly be a vulnerability at corners and free kicks. That is not a generalisation. It is a structural observation. Sides under that kind of defensive pressure rarely have a clean-sheet set-piece routine because the issues in open play tend to affect the organisational discipline at dead balls as well.
Nacional's 34 goals will include a proportion from set-piece situations, and this is the kind of match where that detail could be decisive. A team that has the reference points and the movement patterns at corners and free kicks, against a defence that has been under pressure all season, is a combination worth noting carefully.
What Both Coaching Staffs Are Working With
For the Nacional coaching staff, the preparation for this match is relatively straightforward in terms of game plan. Defend with structure, be patient, and use the quality in the final third to create the openings that a leaky AVS defence is likely to offer. The challenge is avoiding complacency. Sides that are well below their opponents in the table can still cause problems if the in-possession team becomes loose and allows them to play through pressure.
For AVS, the coaching challenge is considerably harder. A goals-against figure of 65 means the defensive patterns have not been consistent enough across the season, and finding a solution in a single match is not realistic. What is realistic is setting up with a clear structure, making it difficult for Nacional to find space in behind, and looking to be a threat from set pieces themselves. AVS have scored 22 goals, which means there are players in this squad who can find the net. The question is whether the game plan allows those players to get into the positions they need.
The Verdict
This is a match where the structural evidence points clearly toward Nacional. They have the better defensive record, the better goal-scoring return, and the positional comfort in the table to approach the game with a clear and organised game plan. AVS are a side that has been exposed defensively throughout the season, and the pattern of how they have conceded suggests that Nacional's attacking structure will find openings.
The detail to watch is how AVS respond when they go behind. If Nacional take an early lead, the game plan for the bottom side becomes more desperate, and that tends to create more space, which in turn creates more goals. This is a fixture where the final scoreline could be more emphatic than a casual glance at the league table might suggest.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Nacional's defensive statistics in Liga Portugal this season?
Nacional have conceded 41 goals and scored 34 in Liga Portugal, giving them a goal difference of minus seven. They currently sit in 14th place in the table.
How many goals has AVS conceded in Liga Portugal this season?
AVS have conceded 65 goals in Liga Portugal this season while scoring just 22. That defensive record is the worst in the division and reflects a structural pattern that has made them vulnerable throughout the campaign. They sit bottom of the table in 18th place.
Why is the Nacional vs AVS fixture significant in the context of Liga Portugal?
The fixture brings together two sides with notably different defensive records. Nacional have conceded 41 goals while AVS have conceded 65, a gap of 24 that points to clear structural differences between the two squads. With AVS rooted to the bottom of the table, this is a match that carries significant pressure for the visiting side.
