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Bayer 04 Leverkusen host RB Leipzig in the Bundesliga on Saturday evening, and it’s the kind of game that can shift the mood around the run-in in a hurry. Leverkusen sit sixth with 55 points, still chasing the pack above them and trying to turn a solid season into something bigger. Leipzig are third on 62 points, right in the race for Champions League qualification and with a genuine chance to finish strongly enough to put pressure on the sides above them.
There’s more than league position at stake here. Leverkusen need points to keep their European hopes alive and to stop this season from drifting into “nearly” territory. Leipzig, under Ole Werner, arrive with top-four security still not banked and no appetite for a slip at a ground where they’ve had plenty of tight battles before. These two know each other well. The recent meetings have been lively, goal-heavy, and rarely polite.
Leverkusen’s recent story has been a bit messy, but not without bite. They went to Köln on 25 April and came away with a 2-1 win, and that at least steadied things after a rougher spell. Before that, FC Bayern München knocked them out of the DFB Pokal with a 2-0 home defeat on 22 April, which came after a 2-1 Bundesliga loss at home to FC Augsburg. That was a sore one. They had briefly looked sharper again when they beat Borussia Dortmund 1-0 away on 11 April, and earlier still they’d torn into VfL Wolfsburg in a 6-3 home win. Go back a little further and the picture gets even noisier: a 3-3 draw at Heidenheim on 21 March, the sort of game that tells you Leverkusen can score in batches but don’t always control what happens behind them.
That’s the theme. They can hurt teams. They can also gift them chances. In the league, their home record is still decent enough — eight wins, three draws and four defeats at their ground, with 33 goals scored and 17 conceded — but it isn’t the sort of home base that scares elite opposition into submission. Four defeats already tells its own story. So does the fact they’ve scored a lot without really boxing games off cleanly. The 6-3 against Wolfsburg was fun for everyone except the defenders. The 2-1 at Köln was more controlled on the scoreboard than in the underlying numbers; they were out-shot 25 to 8 and still needed Patrik Schick’s finishing to get over the line. That’s not the mark of a side running smoothly. It’s a side getting by.
There is, though, enough attacking punch here to make them dangerous again in front of their own fans. Kasper Hjulmand’s side have scored 62 league goals overall, which puts them level with Leipzig. That’s no small thing. But the defensive split matters too: 42 conceded overall, and 17 of those at home. That’s the bit Leipzig will fancy. Leverkusen rarely look comfortable when the game opens up for long periods. They’d much rather play it on the front foot, nick the tempo early and turn it into a rhythm match. Can they do that against a Leipzig side in this kind of form? That’s the question.
Leipzig arrive in far better shape. Their last six league matches read like a team with purpose: a 3-1 home win over Union Berlin on 24 April, a 3-1 away win at Eintracht Frankfurt on 18 April, a 1-0 home win over Borussia M’gladbach, then a 2-1 win at Werder Bremen, a 5-0 demolition of Hoffenheim and only the narrow 1-0 defeat at Stuttgart breaking the run. Five wins from six is strong enough on its own. The manner of those wins matters even more. They’ve been beating decent sides away from home and doing it with control, not just chaos.
The Frankfurt result stands out because it wasn’t a smash-and-grab. Leipzig went there and scored three. The Union game was even more emphatic in chance creation, with a huge xG figure and 20 shots to five. That’s the kind of control Ole Werner will love. They’re not just scraping by. They’re forcing opponents onto the back foot and keeping the pressure on for long spells. Their away record backs that up nicely too: eight wins, three draws and four defeats, with 24 goals scored and 19 conceded. Solid. Not perfect, but solid enough to travel with confidence.
The flip side? They’re not a clean-sheet machine on the road. Nineteen conceded away from home is respectable rather than elite, and it keeps this fixture open. Yet Leipzig’s overall profile is still more stable than Leverkusen’s right now. They’ve won 19 league games to Leverkusen’s 16, sit three points clear, and have been much harder to bully in recent weeks. Even when they’ve let in a goal, they’ve usually had enough to answer back. That matters in a game like this. If the first goal comes their way, Leipzig will fancy controlling the rest. If it doesn’t, they’ve still shown enough attacking depth to keep pushing. They don’t look like a side that’ll sit back and hope.
This fixture has been a lively one in recent seasons, and the results are usually open enough to keep both sets of supporters on edge. Leverkusen beat Leipzig 3-1 in Leipzig on 20 December 2025, which followed a 2-2 draw in January 2025. Before that, Leipzig won 3-2 at Leverkusen in August 2024, and Leverkusen replied with a 3-2 away win in January 2024. That’s a run of games with plenty of goals, late swings and very little daylight between the sides.
The pattern is hard to ignore. Five straight meetings have gone over 2.5 goals and both teams have scored in all five. That doesn’t guarantee anything on Saturday, of course, but it does tell you these teams tend to bring out the open game in each other. Nobody gets to relax. Not for a minute.
Double Chance 1X at 2/5 looks the right call here. If you want a few more angles around BTTS and win combinations, our BTTS and win tips page pulls together BTTS and win combinations if you want a more aggressive version of the same kind of read. Leverkusen haven’t been reliable enough to trust for a straight win, but at home they’re still dangerous and Leipzig don’t quite have the away clean-sheet profile to make this a simple away-day. The draw is very live, and that’s what makes the 1X angle safer than taking a side outright.
A 2-1 scoreline to Leverkusen feels about right. They’ve got the attacking edge at home to land a couple, and Leipzig’s recent away work means this shouldn’t be a walkover either. If you want a slightly more aggressive angle, Both Teams to Score is the live alternative — the recent meetings have been full of goals, and both teams have enough quality to find a way through.
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