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Almere City FC host De Graafschap on Wednesday evening, 6 May 2026, in the VriendenLoterij Eredivisie relegation/promotion playoffs, with both clubs chasing the same lifeline in a tie that carries far more weight than an ordinary league fixture. For Almere, this is about protecting their top-flight place and turning a decent run into something decisive. For De Graafschap, it’s another shot at forcing their way into the Eredivisie picture and making a season’s work count when it matters most.
There’s no table to lean on here, no easy arithmetic from the regular season. This is knockout football, and it’s unforgiving. One good night can reshape everything; one slow start can send a side home for the summer. Almere come in with the cleaner recent momentum and the feel of a team that’s found its edge again. De Graafschap arrive with goals in them, some away-day threat, and enough attacking punch to make this awkward. That’s the tension. One side looks steadier. The other looks dangerous.
Almere also carry a bit of recent experience against this opponent. They beat De Graafschap 2-0 in January, then turned around the leg or the dynamic in the previous meeting depending on the context of the schedule, so there’s no fear factor here. Still, this is a fresh test. Playoff football never cares much about what happened three months ago.
Almere’s recent story is a little messy if you look too quickly, but the deeper pattern is more encouraging than the raw sequence suggests. They were beaten 2-1 at Willem II Tilburg on 12 April, then lost 4-1 at home to FC Dordrecht on 17 April, and the wobble continued with a 3-1 defeat away to VVV-Venlo on 24 April. That was a rough stretch. Defensively, they looked open. The mood would’ve been pretty flat.
Then came the response, and it mattered. Almere went to FC Den Bosch on 29 April and came back with a 3-2 win, a game that tilted their way late enough to matter psychologically. A few days later, on 2 May, they backed it up with a much cleaner 3-0 home win over the same opposition. That’s the key shift. They haven’t just scraped through; they’ve started to look sharper, more ruthless, and far less fragile in their own box.
At home this season, Almere have been decent rather than dominant: 5 wins, 4 draws and 7 losses, with 22 scored and 29 conceded on their ground. That’s not the profile of a team you’d trust blindly, and the home goals-against column tells you exactly why. But there’s enough attacking juice there to trouble most opponents, especially when they get into the kind of rhythm they showed against FC Den Bosch and FC Dordrecht. The 3-0 playoff win was the cleanest version of them — 16 shots, 9 on target, three big chances created, none conceded. That’s the template they’ll want again.
They’re also carrying one useful streak into this tie: unbeaten in their last two. Not a grand run, but in playoff football, timing matters more than vanity. Almere don’t need to be perfect. They just need to be solid enough at home and sharp enough when the chances arrive. That’s been their better side lately.
De Graafschap’s recent run has been a mixed bag, but not the sort of mixed bag that sends a team into a tie without hope. They went to Willem II Tilburg on 28 March and won 2-0, which was a proper away statement, then drew 2-2 at FC Eindhoven on 3 April and followed that with a wild 3-3 at VVV-Venlo on 11 April. After a 3-1 home win over SC Cambuur on 17 April, they fell 1-0 at FC Emmen on 24 April. So the shape is obvious enough: they can score, they can be involved in open games, and they don’t always shut the back door.
That away form is the issue, or at least part of it. On the road this season, De Graafschap have 7 wins, 3 draws and 7 losses, with 29 goals scored and 30 conceded. That’s very much the record of a side that can hurt teams but doesn’t always control the game. They’ve been involved in plenty of end-to-end affairs away from home, and the 3-3 at VVV-Venlo and 2-2 at FC Eindhoven fit the picture. They’re not shy. They also don’t always close games out.
The loss at FC Emmen was a reminder of the downside. They created chances — 17 shots, six on target, two big chances — but still lost 1-0 after allowing FC Emmen to generate far too much at the other end. That’s the danger here. If De Graafschap turn this into a stretched, open game, they’ve got enough quality to score. If they leave space in behind, Almere will fancy landing a damaging blow at home.
Mind you, they’ve shown some resilience too. Wins at Willem II and at home to Cambuur weren’t accidents. This isn’t a side arriving in poor touch. One loss won’t break them. But it does mean they can’t afford another slow start, especially against an Almere team that’s found a little confidence in the last fortnight.
These two know each other well enough, and the recent meetings have been lively. Almere won 2-0 when the sides met on 18 January 2026, while De Graafschap edged a 3-2 home win in September 2025. Go a little further back and the pattern gets even clearer: there have been goals, a few tight finishes, and very little in the way of caution.
That’s the feel of this match-up. Almere have had enough success to believe they can handle De Graafschap, but the visitors have also shown they can get through their defence. The more recent home win for Almere does matter here. So does the fact that these fixtures often open up rather than settle into something cagey. One clean sheet in the last two meetings. That tells its own story.
We’re backing Almere City FC to win at 1/1 here, and that price has a fair bit going for it in a playoff tie that feels closer than the odds suggest. For more context beyond this pick, see our round betting guide, which breaks down round betting if you want a less standard market explained properly. Almere’s last two results have been a sharp turnaround after that mid-April dip, and the 3-0 win over FC Den Bosch was the best version of them — bright, direct, and far more secure at the back. De Graafschap are dangerous, no question, but their away record isn’t strong enough to make them the default pick in a ground where Almere have started to hit a stride.
The 2-1 scoreline looks the right call. Almere should get chances, De Graafschap should get one or two of their own, and the home side’s recent edge in both penalty-area efficiency and game control tips this narrowly in their favour. If you want a different angle, Both Teams To Score has a decent case given the attacking patterns of both sides, but the straight home win is the play.
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