FC Groningen welcome NEC Nijmegen to Euroborg on Sunday evening in the VriendenLoterij Eredivisie, and this one carries a lot more weight for the visitors than the hosts. Groningen sit 10th on 42 points, safely away from the bottom end but still with pride and a strong finish to chase. NEC, by contrast, are third on 56 points and right in the race for the best possible finishing position. That’s not just about bragging rights. It can shape the whole end of the season.
For Dick Lukkien’s side, the picture is pretty simple: they’re trying to stay sharp, stay entertaining and turn a decent home season into something a bit more convincing. Dick Schreuder’s NEC arrive with higher ambitions and a much bigger attacking output, yet they’ve also been wobbling lately. Four league games without a win is a little awkward when you’re sitting in the top three. They’ve got the quality to hurt Groningen. They’ve also got enough looseness at the back to make this a proper scrap.
And there’s a useful historical edge to this too. The last meeting in the league ended 2-0 to NEC in Nijmegen in November, while Groningen have lost two of the last three home-and-away league meetings against them. That won’t frighten the hosts, but it does tell you NEC have had their number more often than not. Still, this feels like a game where goals are the main story.
FC Groningen Form & Analysis
Groningen’s recent run has been lively, messy and never dull. They beat AZ Alkmaar 3-0 at home on 22 March, which was the sort of result that makes people sit up. A 1-1 draw away to PEC Zwolle followed, then a tidy 2-0 win at SC Telstar on 4 April. That looked like a proper springboard. It didn’t quite become one. A 3-1 loss at Feyenoord on 25 April was acceptable on paper, but the 2-3 home defeat to Excelsior on 2 May was a step backwards. That last one stung. They led early, conceded three times, and never looked settled at the back.
That’s the recurring theme here. Groningen can score. They’ve got 45 league goals overall and 25 of them have come at home, where they’ve picked up 22 points from 16 games. That’s a respectable home return, even if the 6-4-6 split leaves room for frustration. They’ve scored more than once in several big fixtures and they’re not shy about opening games up, which is why their matches tend to have a bit of life about them. But the same attacking intent leaves gaps. Their home goals-against figure of 17 isn’t disastrous, yet the recent defensive showings haven’t inspired confidence.
The 2-3 loss to Excelsior summed it up. Groningen created chances, finished enough to keep the crowd interested, and still came away empty-handed. The xG split from that match — 1.13 to 2.58 — was ugly. They were second best in the box and were punished whenever Excelsior got forward. That’s the warning sign ahead of NEC. If Groningen push on as they usually do, they’re likely to get chances. But they’ll also be exposed. Three wins from their last six league games sounds decent enough, yet the more relevant point is that they’ve now lost two in a row. Momentum’s gone a touch cold. That won’t be ideal against one of the division’s better attacks.
NEC Nijmegen Form & Analysis
NEC’s season has been stronger, cleaner and far more ambitious. Third place with 56 points is serious business, and their attack has been one of the sharpest in the league. They’ve scored 74 goals in 32 league matches, which is a hefty return, and 35 of those have come away from home. That’s not the profile of a side that sits deep and grinds. They come to play. The trouble is that the back line hasn’t always kept pace.
The recent run tells that story nicely. They drew 2-2 with SC Heerenveen, then 0-2 at Excelsior, which looked like a solid away win. A 1-1 home draw with Feyenoord followed, and then the cup defeat at AZ Alkmaar, where they were beaten 5-1. That was a rough night. They steadied a bit with a 1-1 draw away to FC Twente and then another 1-1 at home to SC Telstar on 2 May, though that last result felt like two points dropped rather than one earned. NEC had 21 shots, seven on target and seven big chances, but still couldn’t put Telstar away. Wasteful? Absolutely. Dangerous? Also yes.
Away from home, though, NEC are still a serious threat. Their league record on the road is the second-best in the division: seven wins, six draws and only three defeats. They’ve scored 35 away goals and conceded 26, so there’s a clear trend. They travel well because they attack well. Simple as that. Yet the clean-sheet problem keeps following them around, and a four-game run without a win has dulled a little of the shine. This isn’t a side in crisis. It’s a side that keeps creating enough to win, but keeps leaving openings behind them. Against Groningen, that usually means action at both ends.
Mind you, the Telstar draw also offered a reminder that NEC can dominate territory and still end up chasing the game. Their xG of 2.30 was comfortable, their shot count was huge, and they still needed a late equaliser from Tjaronn Chery after Sem van Duijn had put Telstar in front. That’s the issue. They’re good enough to overwhelm teams, but not always ruthless enough to shut the door. On the road, you’d expect them to score. You wouldn’t trust them to keep things neat for 90 minutes.
Head-to-Head
NEC have had the better of this fixture more often than not in recent seasons, and the results are a warning for Groningen. The latest league meeting ended in a 2-0 home win for NEC on 9 November 2025, while Groningen were also beaten 2-1 by NEC in a friendly last July. Before that, Groningen did edge a 2-1 home league win in February 2025, but that’s the outlier in a broader pattern that leans towards Nijmegen. NEC’s 6-0 hammering of Groningen in November 2024 still hangs in the background too. That was a brutal afternoon.
There’s no need to overplay the head-to-head, because each season writes its own story. Still, Groningen have gone ten straight meetings without keeping a clean sheet in this fixture, and that matters when you’re trying to price up a goals market. NEC tend to find a way through. Groningen usually get chances too. Put those together and you’re staring at a game with plenty of threat at both ends.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/9 here, and it’s the clearest angle on the board. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the double chance betting guide breaks down double chance betting so the risk-reward tradeoff is easier to judge. Groningen have been involved in open games at home for weeks, NEC arrive with one of the league’s most productive attacks, and both sides carry enough defensive baggage to keep this moving. This doesn’t need much inventing. It just needs finishing. The 63% win probability behind the line feels fair, and anything around a 2-1 sort of game fits the shape of it nicely.
A 2-1 Groningen win is the correct score call, even if NEC are the side with the stronger league position. Why? Groningen’s home record is decent, they’ve already shown they can land punches against big teams like AZ and Ajax, and NEC’s recent habit of conceding first or failing to close games out keeps the door open. At the same time, NEC’s road scoring record is too strong to ignore. One goal for them feels almost standard. Two isn’t out of the question. If you wanted a slightly safer route, both teams to score would be the obvious alternative, but Over 2.5 still looks the sharper play.