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Al-Ahli welcome Al-Fateh to Jeddah on Wednesday evening, 6 May 2026, in a Saudi Pro League meeting that means very different things to both clubs. Matthias Jaissle’s side are chasing the business end of the title race and, at the very least, want to protect their grip on a top-three finish. They sit third with 69 points and only three league defeats all season. That’s a serious platform. One more good result at home and the pressure stays on everyone around them.
Al-Fateh arrive looking to steady themselves. They’re 12th with 33 points, not in immediate danger, but not in any sort of comfort zone either. Jose Manuel Gomes has seen enough mixed spells to know this trip is a hard one. The problem is obvious: Al-Ahli at home have been ruthless, and Al-Fateh away from home have been far too open. That’s the basic tension here. Can the visitors nick something against a side that rarely gives much away in Jeddah?
There’s also a neat contrast in momentum. Al-Ahli come in off a 4-0 win over Al-Okhdood, while Al-Fateh drew 2-2 with Neom SC after a game that had chances at both ends and a fair bit of chaos. One side looks like a team with a late-season target. The other looks like a team trying to stay afloat in the middle. Simple as that.
Al-Ahli’s recent league and continental run has had a bit of everything, but the overall picture is strong. They thumped Al-Okhdood 4-0 on 3 May, a performance that was every bit as dominant as the scoreline suggests. Before that, they went to Al-Nassr and lost 2-0, which is hardly shameful, especially away from home. In Asia, they drew blanks against Machida Zelvia and Al Duhail, but beat Vissel Kobe 2-1 away and edged Johor Darul Ta’zim 2-1 at home. That’s a good sequence. Not flawless, but good. Very good, actually.
The Al-Okhdood win told you plenty about where they’re at right now. They had 18 shots to three, put eight on target, and created four big chances. Al-Okhdood barely got a look in. Franck Kessié scored twice, Valentin Atangana Edoa got the opener, and Firas Al-Buraikan rounded things off. Even with Hussain Al Zabdani sent off just before the break, Al-Ahli controlled the game. That kind of authority matters when you’re coming into a league fixture you’re expected to win.
At home in the Saudi Pro League, Al-Ahli have been untouchable. Twelve wins and three draws from 15 league matches at their ground, with 39 goals scored and only 12 conceded. No home defeats. That’s the kind of record that changes how opponents approach the game before kick-off. They’ve also kept things tidy at the back far more often than not, and their attacking return at home is comfortably above the league’s general home benchmark. They don’t just win in Jeddah. They usually do it with control.
Al-Fateh have at least shown some life lately, even if the results still leave plenty to be desired. Their last six tell a familiar story of a side that can score but struggles to close games out. They drew 2-2 with Neom SC at home on 2 May, having been involved in a frantic contest that saw them lead and then get pegged back. Before that came another 1-1 draw at Al-Shabab, which was a decent away point in isolation. They beat Al-Khaleej 1-0 at home, but before that there was a run of three straight defeats: 1-0 at Al-Okhdood, 1-0 at home to Al-Hilal, and 3-2 away at Al-Taawoun. That’s a messy run. Plenty of effort, not enough payoff.
There is some attacking life in this team. Saïd Benrahma scored early against Neom, Ala’a Al-Hejji added another after the break, and Mourad Batna plus Sofiane Bendebka were involved in the later goals. Al-Fateh aren’t short of players who can find the net. The issue is that they so often need to score more than once just to stay in the game. Their defence has leaked 51 league goals overall, and when they go away from home it gets even tougher. That’s been the pattern all season.
Their away record makes for uncomfortable reading. Just two wins, five draws and seven defeats on the road, with only 15 goals scored and 25 conceded. That’s not the profile of a side you trust in a place like Jeddah. They can compete in spells, and the draw at Al-Shabab shows they’re not a complete rollover, but there’s a difference between competing and surviving. Al-Fateh haven’t been doing enough of either lately. Three games unbeaten sounds respectable on paper. On the road, against a top-three side with a perfect home record? It doesn’t buy you much.
This fixture has a habit of producing something for both teams to chew on. The most recent meeting ended in a 2-1 win for Al-Fateh in December 2025, which will at least give the visitors a bit of confidence. But Al-Ahli won the home meeting before that, 2-0 in February 2025, and there was a 1-1 draw in March 2024. Go back a little further and the pattern becomes more erratic, with Al-Fateh enjoying a 5-1 rout in September 2023 and Al-Ahli taking a 1-0 away win in February 2022.
What stands out isn’t simple dominance from either side. It’s that the matchup can swing. Al-Ahli usually create more, but Al-Fateh have had their moments and have scored in enough of these games to keep the conversation alive. That said, the more recent home trend leans Al-Ahli’s way. And that’s the bit that matters most here.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/5 for this one. For more context beyond this pick, see our Bet365 live streaming page, which covers Bet365 live streaming if you like to pair match coverage with in-play betting. It’s the cleanest read on the match. Al-Ahli are strong enough at home to carve out chances against almost anyone, but Al-Fateh have found enough openings lately to keep themselves in games. You don’t need a wild imagination to see them nicking one here, especially with Al-Ahli having shown in Europe that they can be a little more measured than reckless when they don’t need to chase a contest.
Still, the home side should have the edge. Al-Ahli’s Jeddah record is far too solid to ignore, and their attacking ceiling is higher than Al-Fateh’s. A 2-1 home win feels right. Al-Ahli usually find a way, but the visitors have enough forward threat to make it awkward for a while. If you want a smaller alternative, Al-Ahli to win and both teams to score isn’t a bad angle either.
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