Al-Fateh welcome Al-Najma SC to Thursday evening’s Saudi Pro League meeting on 14 May 2026, and the mood around both camps couldn’t be more different. Jose Manuel Gomes’ side sit 12th with 33 points, comfortable enough on paper but still capable of making life awkward for themselves, while Nestor El Maestro’s Al-Najma are stranded in 18th with just 13 points and a mountain of damage behind them. For the visitors, this is about pride, survival in the broader sense, and trying to salvage something from a season that’s mostly gone wrong.
There’s also a pretty clear competitive edge to this one. Al-Fateh aren’t chasing a title or a cup run, but they do have a chance to finish strongly and push their home record to a healthier-looking level. Al-Najma, by contrast, are trying to stop the bleeding. They’re bottom-end material in every sense: the record, the goals against column, the away form. That’s the blunt truth. And when a team has taken only three points from 16 away league games, the trip to a mid-table side with a decent home return is never going to feel friendly.
The first meeting between these sides this season ended 1-1 in Al-Najma’s favour on 16 January. That result matters because it reminds us this fixture hasn’t been completely one-sided, even if the broader picture now points in a very different direction. Al-Fateh have more quality, more structure at home and a far better recent platform. Al-Najma have some attacking moments, but they carry too many defensive cracks to trust for long.
Al-Fateh Form & Analysis
Al-Fateh arrive here off a narrow 1-0 defeat away to Al-Riyadh on 10 May, and that loss told a familiar story. They were in the game, but not sharp enough in the final third. Before that came another away defeat, a 3-1 reverse at Al-Ahli on 6 May, where they were punished by a much stronger side. Yet the picture wasn’t all flat. At home, they drew 2-2 with Neom SC on 2 May and earlier shared a 1-1 result away to Al-Shabab on 28 April. Between those two stalemates sat a proper lift: a 1-0 home win over Al-Khaleej on 24 April. Go back a little further and there was another 1-0 defeat away to Al-Okhdood on 5 April. They’ve been hard to pin down, but not chaotic. That’s an important difference.
At home, Al-Fateh’s league record reads six wins, four draws and six defeats, with 23 goals scored and 26 conceded. That’s not elite, but it is competitive. They’ve been far more reliable on their own pitch than on the road, and that split is doing a lot of work for them in the table. The shape of their home season suggests they can get on top of games without turning every one of them into a procession. They’re not a free-scoring force, but they do enough to keep opponents honest. And when the game opens up, they’ve shown they can nick it.
The concern is that they don’t always protect leads well enough, and their recent results bear that out. The 2-2 draw with Neom SC was lively but imperfect, and the loss at Al-Riyadh came with underwhelming attacking numbers: just 0.52 xG from 11 shots, while conceding 1.93 xGA and three big chances. That was a flat performance. Still, the bigger takeaway is that Gomes’ side have enough about them to control a home contest against weaker opposition. They won’t want to make this a slog, but if they keep the tempo sensible and press the right moments, they should be in charge for long stretches.
Al-Najma SC Form & Analysis
Al-Najma’s recent run is a mix of brief resistance and familiar collapse. Their last outing finished 2-2 at home to Al-Hazem on 9 May, a game that flattered neither defence. They scored early through Felippe Cardoso, doubled down through Omar Al Soma, and still couldn’t close it out. Before that came a goalless draw away to Al-Ettifaq on 4 May, which at least showed some discipline. But the previous two matches were defeats: a 3-1 loss away to Al-Khaleej on 28 April and a 2-1 home reverse to Al-Taawoun on 23 April. Their one bright spot in the recent spell was a 2-1 home win over Neom SC on 11 April. Since then, it’s been mostly frustration.
The away record is bleak. Zero wins, three draws and 13 defeats from 16 league trips, with only 11 goals scored and 38 conceded. That’s not just poor; it’s relegation-level away form of the most obvious kind. They don’t travel well, they don’t keep clean sheets and they don’t score enough to compensate. That alone makes this assignment a difficult one. You’d expect them to spend long periods without the ball, and when they do get chances, they’ll need to be ruthless. They rarely are.
Still, there’s a slight wrinkle with Al-Najma. They’ve shown a bit more bite in the attacking moments than their league position might suggest, and their recent games have tended to open up. The 2-2 with Al-Hazem had four goals and a fair amount of chaos. Their 5-2 defeat at Al-Nassr was brutal, but it also showed they’re not completely shut out against stronger teams. The issue is that they keep conceding first or falling behind in messy spells, then chasing games with too little defensive control. That makes them dangerous enough to land a goal, but not stable enough to trust over 90 minutes.
Mind you, there’s a small angle here that’s been consistent: Al-Najma have been involved in plenty of goals. Their recent matches haven’t been cagey affairs, and they’ve scored in enough of them to keep the possibility of a reply alive. But that doesn’t change the central problem. Their back line is leaking too much, especially away from home, and every decent host has found room to punish them. Al-Fateh should see that as an invitation.
Head-to-Head
The only league meeting available in the record ended level, with Al-Najma and Al-Fateh drawing 1-1 on 16 January 2026. That result at least tells us Al-Fateh won’t get a free pass just because they’re at home this time. They were held before, and they’ll know the visitors can be awkward when the game is balanced.
That said, one draw doesn’t outweigh the wider body of evidence. The broader pattern around this fixture is that neither side has managed to impose a real grip yet, but Al-Fateh’s stronger home record and Al-Najma’s miserable away numbers change the lens completely for the return match.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Home Win at 1/2 here, and it’s hard to quarrel with that price. Al-Fateh are simply the more trustworthy side on their own ground, while Al-Najma’s away form is the kind of record that puts you off backing them in almost any context. Zero away wins and 38 goals conceded on the road is a savage combination. That won’t suddenly fix itself in one Thursday night trip.
The other piece that matters is the game state. Al-Fateh don’t need to overreach, and they shouldn’t. Their home numbers suggest enough control to edge this, while Al-Najma’s recent draws and narrow defeats hint at a side that can hang around before cracking. A 2-1 home win feels about right, even if Al-Fateh could also make it a little cleaner if they start well. The one alternative worth a glance is Al-Fateh to win and both teams to score, given Al-Najma’s habit of finding a goal amid the mess. Still, the straight home win is the safest call.