The 2023-24 La Liga campaign has entered its decisive stretch, and the predictor models around Europe agree on one thing: nothing is settled yet. From the fight for the championship to the scramble for Europe and the desperate attempts to avoid the drop, every weekend feels like a cup final. Here is a data-driven look at the most likely scenarios between now and June.
1. Title Race – Three Horses, One Photo Finish
Barcelona’s winter reinforcement in the midfield has steadied Xavi’s project, but the underlying numbers still place Real Madrid as marginal favorites (42 % probability) thanks to a deeper squad and the clincher that is Jude Bellingham’s breakout season. Girona’s fairy-tale story refuses to fade; their expected-goals surplus (+22) is the league’s best, and the forecasting algorithm gives the Catalan newcomers a 28 % shot at an historic first crown. Barça trail slightly at 26 %, yet their remaining schedule is the softest of the trio—no top-six opponents after Match-day 32. Expect the gap between first and third to stay within six points until the penultimate round.
2. Top-four Battle – Atlético in the Cross-hairs
Diego Simeone’s side have been the masters of grinding out results, but a taxing Champions League run exposes a thin attack (1.56 goals per 90, seventh in the division). Simulations now project a 61 % chance that either Athletic Club or Real Sociedad leapfrogs Atlético for fourth. Athletic’s set-piece dominance—17 goals from dead-ball situations—coupled with Nico Williams’ warp-speed dribbles, makes them the sexiest outside bet. Meanwhile, Real Betis, handicapped by a Europa League hangover, are sliding toward seventh, which may still yield a Conference League spot if Osasuna do not win this year’s Copa del Rey.

3. Relegation – Alarm Bells in Andalusia
Granada and Cádiz occupy the bottom two in the forecast table, with a combined 73 % probability of demotion. Granada’s 14-match winless run masks one ray of hope: Myrto Uzuni’s shot map suggests they are under-performing xG by nearly eight goals. Regression to the mean could spark a late escape, though fixtures away at Bernabéu and Montjuïc look ominous. Almería have already been cut adrift on 30 projected points, leaving the third relegation place a dog-fight between Mallorca, Rayo Vallecano and surprisingly, Sevilla. José Luis Mendilibar’s Europa League heroics have masked league frailties; if Youssef En-Nesyri departs in July, Sevilla’s 37 % relegation probability will tick upward.
4. Golden Boot – Moroccan King or French Prince?
Bellingham tops the scoring chart at 17, but a two-match suspension looms for accumulation. Forecasts like him to finish on 23 goals. Yet the model’s boldest call is that Atlético’s Yusuf Yazici—currently on nine—surges to 21, assuming he retains penalty duties and 70 % playing time. The sleeper is Alexander Sørloth, whose post-World Cup xG form at Villarreal projects 19 goals. Whoever claims the Pichichi may well decide where the trophy lands in May.
5. The Macro View – What the Numbers Can’t See
Beyond spreadsheets, calendar congestion and the Club World Cup in late December have compressed rotations, raising soft-tissue injuries by 18 % year-on-year. Teams with Big Data medical programs (Real Madrid, Barça, Girona) gain a hidden two-to-three-point edge over clubs relying on traditional methods. Likewise, VAR interventions have swung 11 results this season; matches involving Barcelona show a +7 goal differential overturned in their favor, the widest split in the league. While luck is impossible to model, referee-averse tactics (defensive actions 40 cm outside the box) have crept into Spain’s coaching playbooks and could tilt razor-thin margins.
Bottom line: buckle up. La Liga’s algorithm says eleven clubs still dream of Champions League football, while six fear second-tier fate. The next eight match-days will erase the computer’s probabilities and replace them with cold, hard narratives we will retell for decades.











