Almere City FC host Willem II Tilburg on Wednesday evening, 13 May 2026, in the Keuken Kampioen Playoffs, with a place in the next round and the broader prize of survival in the top-flight picture on the line. This is the sort of tie where every detail matters. One loose pass, one late set-piece, one red card — it can all swing the whole thing.
The first leg at Willem II finished 2-1 to John Stegeman’s side, so Almere arrive needing to turn the tie around on home soil. That is no small task, but Jeroen Rijsdijk’s team have at least given themselves a fighting chance by staying alive in the return leg and finding goals in this playoff run. Willem II, for their part, look steady, awkward and hard to shake off. They’ve built a lead and now get to protect it.
There’s a bit of recent history here too. These two have already met in the league and again in the playoff bracket, with Willem II taking the latest edge. But this is not simply about past meetings. It’s about whether Almere can make home advantage count, and whether Willem II can keep the door shut long enough to finish the job. That’s the real question.
Almere City FC Form & Analysis
Almere’s recent run has been messy in the best possible way for a playoff team: plenty of goals, a few scares, and enough fight to keep them in the tie. They drew 2-2 away at De Graafschap on 9 May, conceding late after leading through Ferdy Druijf, Rowan Besselink and Milan de Haan all playing their part in a lively game that never really settled. Before that, they beat De Graafschap 3-1 at home, a result that came after a 3-0 home win over FC Den Bosch and a breathless 3-2 away victory at the same opponent. That was an eye-catching spell. They’ve been involved in proper football matches, not cagey non-events.
The flip side is that Almere haven’t exactly been airtight. The 3-1 defeat at VVV-Venlo on 24 April was a reminder that if they lose control, they can be punished. Still, they’ve responded well and haven’t lost in four. That matters now. Confidence is a real thing in these ties, and Almere’s attack has been doing its job. They’ve scored in their last six, and there’s a sense that they’ll get chances again here. The numbers around their home season are decent too: this has been a ground where they’ve picked up wins, scored freely and usually asked questions of the opposition back line.
That said, the defensive picture isn’t clean. The red card for Rowan Besselink in the draw at De Graafschap won’t help the sense of calm, and they’ve been too easy to open up at times. Almere’s strength is obvious — they can score in bursts, and they don’t seem shy about getting bodies forward. Their weakness is just as obvious. When the game gets stretched, they can leave space behind them. Against a team as organised as Willem II, that’s a worry.
Willem II Tilburg Form & Analysis
Willem II come into the second leg without a defeat in seven, and that run tells you plenty about where they are mentally. They’ve won their last three before the first-leg draw, including a neat 1-0 away success at RKC Waalwijk on 5 May, then followed it up with a 1-1 draw at home to the same opponents. Earlier, they beat FC Dordrecht 2-1 away, saw off Jong AZ 3-0 at home, and beat Almere 2-1 in Tilburg on 12 April. That is a proper sequence. They’ve looked composed, stubborn and difficult to rush.
The away form is especially important here. Willem II have been very comfortable on the road in this run, taking wins at RKC, FC Dordrecht and Roda JC Kerkrade without looking flustered. They’re not just surviving away from home; they’re controlling games well enough to nick them. That’s a handy trait in a knockout tie where patience often beats ambition. John Stegeman will know that a 2-1 lead gives his side a useful cushion, but not a safe one. One poor start and the tie changes quickly.
What stands out most is their ability to strike first and manage the rest. Willem II have made a habit of getting in front, then forcing opponents to chase. They don’t need to dominate possession for long spells to be effective. They need control, not chaos. Their home draw with RKC showed a team capable of surviving pressure, while the away win at Waalwijk told the same story in a tighter, more hostile setting. This isn’t a side that panics. That usually counts for a lot in May.
Head-to-Head
Willem II have had the upper hand in the recent meetings, and that pattern matters a little here. They beat Almere 2-1 in Tilburg on 12 April and also won 1-0 at home earlier in the 2025/26 league campaign. Almere did manage a 2-0 win away at Willem II in March 2025, so there’s no complete monopoly, but the last two have gone the way of Stegeman’s side.
There’s also a slight trend towards tighter games between these two. Several of the recent meetings have been low-scoring and tense, which fits the shape of a playoff tie more than a free-scoring league fixture. You wouldn’t expect a wild shootout here. Not with this at stake.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 1/2 for this one. Almere don’t need to win the tie on Wednesday night; they need to stay alive in it. That changes the picture. Their home form has been good enough to trust, they’ve scored in every one of their last six, and their playoff run has already shown they can land punches at the right moments.
Willem II are the stronger side on current overall momentum, no doubt about it, but this market only needs Almere to avoid defeat. With a projected 1.4 to 0.9 xG edge in the hosts’ favour on the night, a 1-1 draw feels like the most natural scoreline. That would suit the bet perfectly. It’s tight, and it probably won’t be pretty. Still, Almere at home with nothing to lose feels a safer route than trying to call a straight winner.
If you want a smaller side bet, under 3.5 goals also has a decent shout. These are playoff legs, and the recent meetings between the sides haven’t exactly turned wild.