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Al-Shabab host Al-Fateh in the Saudi Pro League on Tuesday evening, 28 April 2026, with both sides stuck in the lower half and still looking over their shoulders rather than upwards. It’s not a glamour fixture, but there’s plenty on the line. They’re level on 31 points, separated only by goal difference in 12th and 13th, and neither side can afford to sleepwalk through the run-in.
For Al-Shabab, this is about restoring some control after a season that’s drifted too often. Noureddine Zekri’s side have had enough good spells to stay clear of real danger, but not enough consistency to build momentum. Al-Fateh, under Jose Manuel Gomes, arrive with the same points total and a slightly worse defensive record, which tells its own story. Both clubs have scored enough to stay interesting. Both have also conceded too many cheap goals. That’s why this feels like a proper knife-edge, even if the table doesn’t scream headline act.
The Saudi Pro League context matters here too. Mid-table safety is the immediate target, but neither club will want to limp home with no real identity. Al-Shabab’s home form has been respectable without being dominant, while Al-Fateh’s away record is one of the weaker ones in this section of the division. That tension is exactly why the goals market looks so live.
Al-Shabab’s last few weeks have had a bit of everything. They drew 2-2 away to Al-Qadsiah on 14 April in a frantic game that never really settled, then followed it with another away draw at Al-Riyadh, this one 1-1 on 5 April. Before that, they beat Al-Okhdood 2-0 at home, which looked like the kind of controlled result they needed, only to be held 1-1 at Al-Ettifaq soon after. Earlier still came the wild 3-5 home defeat to Al-Hilal — a match that was never going to be tidy — and a 3-1 home win over Al-Riyadh. That’s the picture in a nutshell: capable of scoring, willing to open up, but rarely able to keep things neat for long.
The numbers at home are solid rather than sparkling. Five wins, three draws and five defeats from 13 league matches at this ground is a decent enough return, with 21 scored and 24 conceded. So they’ve been entertaining, yes, but not especially secure. They’re the sort of home side that can get into a game quickly and then lose the thread just as fast. Their 36 goals overall show they’ve got enough in the final third, but 42 conceded is the more worrying figure. That’s a team giving opponents too many looks.
The pattern is obvious too. Al-Shabab have gone four league matches unbeaten since the loss to Al-Hilal, but they’ve also gone two games without a win. They’ve been harder to beat lately, yet not convincing enough to shut games down. That’s the key issue against Al-Fateh. If Zekri’s side start brightly, they usually carry a threat, but they’ve also kept just one clean sheet in a decent stretch of matches. That won’t inspire much confidence against a visiting side who are comfortable making games messy.
Al-Fateh come in on a slightly healthier note after edging Al-Khaleej 1-0 at home on 24 April. That was a useful response after a frustrating spell, and the clean sheet mattered as much as the three points. Before that, though, they’d lost 1-0 away to Al-Okhdood, gone down 1-0 at home to Al-Hilal, and suffered a 3-2 defeat at Al-Taawoun. There was a 1-1 draw with Damac FC in there too, plus a 2-1 home win over Al-Okhdood. So they’ve been in and around the contest in most matches, but they haven’t always had the final word.
Their away record explains why they’re underdogs here. Two wins, four draws and seven defeats on the road is poor enough on its own, and the goals column is even less flattering: 14 scored and 24 conceded away from home. That’s not the profile of a side you trust to go to a venue like this and take control. They can nick moments, and they’ve shown they can keep games tight for spells, but away from home they’ve spent too much of the season chasing matches rather than dictating them.
Still, Gomes’ side aren’t pushovers. They’ve scored 35 league goals, only one fewer than Al-Shabab, and they’ve generally found a way to get on the board in enough matches to stay competitive. The problem is the back line. Forty-eight goals conceded overall is the worst defensive return of the two teams, and that gap has mattered all season. When Al-Fateh lose, it’s often by slim margins, which is why they remain a nuisance. But nuisance and reliability are different things. On the road, they’ve looked fragile too often.
This fixture has been lively in recent meetings, and the balance has swung back and forth. Al-Fateh beat Al-Shabab 2-0 on 3 January 2026, which followed a 3-1 home win for them in May 2025. That’s the freshest memory for both camps, and it’ll stick with Al-Shabab, who haven’t had it all their own way in this matchup lately.
Even so, the broader run says goals are usually in the mix. The sides drew 2-2 at Al-Shabab in December 2024 and Al-Shabab won 3-2 at home in May 2024. Al-Fateh have also tended to get on the score sheet in this fixture. That’s the bit to watch. These meetings don’t normally stay quiet for long.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 1/2 for this one. It’s short, no question, but it still looks the strongest route into the match. Both teams have spent most of the season living with the same flaw: they can score, and they can’t fully trust the back line. Al-Shabab have seen both sides score in seven of their last nine league matches, while Al-Fateh have carried enough threat to make things awkward even in defeats.
The projected 2-1 scoreline fits the tone of the game. Al-Shabab’s home attack has been decent, Al-Fateh’s away defence has been leaky, and recent head-to-head meetings have leaned towards goals rather than caution. You could argue for over 2.5 goals as an alternative, but BTTS feels cleaner. One goal from each side looks very likely, and if there’s a winner, it’s hard not to lean towards the hosts grinding it out just about.
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