By Michael Nsikan Richard – December 6th, 2025
Date: December 6th, 2025
Venue: Estadio de La Cartuja, Seville
Kick-Off: 18:30pm WAT
Match Context & Table Standings
Real Betis: Manuel Pellegrini’s men find themselves in a respectable 5th position, having accumulated 24 points from their opening 14 fixtures.
They’re trailing the Champions League qualification positions by 7 points, but don’t let that fool you—this Betis squad has proven to be one of the most formidable and resilient teams in Spanish football this campaign.
Barcelona: The Catalan giants are flying high at the summit with 37 points from the same number of games. Victory here would stretch their lead to 4 points before Madrid takes on Celta Vigo tomorrow. Fresh off beating Atletico in midweek, Hansi Flick’s side are chasing a 6th straight league win and looking every bit like champions.
Recent Form & Momentum

Barcelona has been absolutely relentless in domestic action lately, racking up 5 consecutive La Liga wins. Their latest triumph saw them overturn a deficit against Atletico Madrid at Camp Nou, running out 3-1 winners thanks to strikes from Raphinha, Dani Olmo, and Ferran Torres. That said, their away record tells a slightly different story—just 4 wins from 7 league trips, and they’ve dropped 3 of their last 5 matches on the road across all competitions.
Betis haven’t tasted defeat often this season—only twice, in fact, and both those losses came at their current home, La Cartuja Stadium.
According to Sportsdunia, Pellegrini’s team hasn’t lost since that October setback against Atletico, going 8 games without defeat and winning 6 of those, including that feisty Seville Derby. They’ve got La Liga’s second-meanest defense too, letting in a mere 14 goals so far.
Head-to-Head Record

History overwhelmingly favors the visitors. Barcelona have prevailed in 38 of the 71 meetings between these two, while Betis have managed just 10 victories.
The recent record at Betis’ home ground makes for even grimmer reading from a home perspective—Barcelona hasn’t lost there in 14 attempts, winning 10 and drawing 4. You’d have to wind the clock back to March 2008 to find Betis’ last home victory against the Blaugrana.
Last season’s meeting at this very venue was a thriller, though. December 7, 2024 ended 2-2, with Robert Lewandowski and Ferran Torres putting Barcelona ahead twice, only for Giovani Lo Celso’s penalty and Assane Diao’s dramatic 90th-minute equalizer to rescue a point for the hosts.
Venue Considerations
Multiple sources confirm that tonight’s clash takes place at Estadio de La Cartuja instead of Betis’ usual stomping ground, the Benito Villamarin. The latter is undergoing a massive renovation project—we’re talking 160 million euros’ worth of modernization work that’s expected to drag on for up to 2 years.
This temporary relocation hasn’t exactly helped Betis maintain home advantage. Both their defeats this season have come at La Cartuja, which tells its own story. Barcelona won’t feel like strangers here, mind you—they played at this stadium in last April’s Copa del Rey Final.
Team News & Predicted Lineups
Real Betis: Pellegrini’s got a proper injury crisis on his hands. Isco Alarcon, Giovani Lo Celso, and Hector Bellerin are all definitely out through injury. Sofyan Amrabat is nursing a leg problem, and there are doubts over Antony too, who rolled his ankle in midweek.
Despite the casualty list, Pellegrini will probably still put out an attacking side, with Abde Ezzalzouli expected to feature out wide.
Barcelona: The visitors aren’t exactly at full strength either. Dani Olmo picked up a shoulder knock while scoring against Atletico and won’t be available. Gavi’s still out with that knee injury, Ronald Araujo is missing for personal matters, and Marc ter Stegen remains on the treatment table with his back issue.
There’s some good news, though. Frenkie de Jong should be back after missing the Atletico game through illness, and Fermin Lopez has returned to training following a muscle complaint.
Tactical Battle

Barca Blaugranes describes Real Betis as a side built around intensity—they press high, move the ball quickly, and have serious pace going forward. Brazilian winger Antony has been thriving since his career reset following that Manchester United move. Pellegrini loves his teams to press aggressively and transition quickly into attack, which could cause Barcelona problems given their recent wobbles away from home.
Getting De Jong back is massive for controlling the game’s rhythm. Expect Pedri to push higher up the pitch, operating just behind Robert Lewandowski with Olmo unavailable.
Pellegrini’s been clear about what’s needed: a complete performance. He knows Barcelona attacks relentlessly, and any defensive lapses will be punished, but reckons his side can hurt the league leaders if they transition well.
Key Factors
Barcelona’s firepower remains frightening—16 goals scored in 7 away league matches tells you everything.
But here’s the catch: they’ve shipped 12 at the other end. Losing Olmo removes a creative spark who’s been pivotal in recent wins, meaning Raphinha, Lamine Yamal, and Pedri will need to step up against Betis’ solid backline.
For Betis, keeping that 8-game unbeaten run going against the league’s most potent attack will demand both defensive steel and ruthless finishing when chances come. The La Cartuja atmosphere and Barcelona’s dodgy away form give genuine reason for optimism that they can get something from this.
This one promises to be a proper examination of Barcelona’s title mettle as they look to keep the pressure on Real Madrid heading into the season’s second half.
With key players missing on both sides and Betis in cracking form, we should be in for a belter.
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