Deportivo Morón's home form and superior attacking numbers make the straightforward result market the first argument. Morón have 23 goals this season while Almirante Brown have scored only 9; that gap underpins the clear majority of previews (including apuestasganadas and two academy previews) that place Morón as favourite. The case against a simple home-win line is Almirante Brown's defensive resilience: eight clean sheets and a relatively low goals-against tally (10) mean Morón may need to break down a compact low block rather than run riot. That tension makes a narrow Morón win more probable than a high-scoring thrashing.
A second thread concerns goal distribution and both-teams-to-score. Morón have six clean sheets themselves and Brown have kept eight, so there is a credible chance one side shuts up shop. The season numbers show a strong tilt toward single-sided scorelines: 23 scored vs 13 conceded for Morón suggests they win by controlling possession and limiting counters. Against that, Morón's higher shot volume raises the prospect of counter-goal vulnerability if they overcommit. On balance, a market that pays slightly above evens for one team to score and the other to stay quiet maps cleanly onto these stats.
Discipline and match temperament supply a third, data-backed angle. The two sides have collected 38 and 33 yellow cards respectively, with Morón showing an unusually high red-card total (4) compared with Brown (1). That pattern signals a game that could see stoppages, tactical fouls and a flashpoint red card — an event that would swing both the result and goal profile. A cards market or an 'under goals' line that accounts for interruptions earns credibility from those figures.
Taken together, the dominant narratives are clear: home control versus a compact away defence, low-to-medium total goals, and a tangible risk of discipline-driven disruption. A single-game outcome that fits those facts is likeliest over multiple extremes.