FC Lausanne-Sport welcome Grasshopper Club Zürich to the Stade de la Tuilière on Saturday evening in the Swiss Super League Relegation Round, with both sides still chasing the kind of stability that has eluded them for much of the season. Lausanne sit third overall on 42 points and have done enough in the league table to stay clear of real danger, but they’ve still been dragged into a rough spell at exactly the wrong time. Grasshopper are fifth on 30 points and know they can’t afford another collapse if they want to avoid being sucked deeper into the scrap at the bottom end of the split.
There’s a bit of history between these two, too, and it isn’t a one-sided rivalry by any stretch. Lausanne have already beaten Grasshopper 3-2 in Zürich back in March, while the reverse fixture in Lausanne finished 1-1 in January. Go back a little further and you find more shared spoils and tight scorelines. These aren’t teams who tend to stroll past each other. They usually make a game of it. That matters here, because both arrive carrying defensive baggage and both have been involved in plenty of open, messy football.
The pressure is different on each side, but it’s real all the same. Lausanne have home pride and a strong ground record to defend. Grasshopper, with Peter Zeidler in charge, are trying to stop their away form from dragging them into trouble. One side has home advantage and a better overall season. The other has the sharper need for a response. That usually produces chances. And goals.
FC Lausanne-Sport Form & Analysis
Lausanne’s recent form has been a bit of a mess, even if the odd result has shown there’s quality in this group. They beat FC Zürich 3-0 at home on 25 April, a result that briefly looked like it might spark something more lasting. Instead, they’ve since lost three straight: 1-3 at home to FC Luzern, then 2-1 away at FC Winterthur, then 2-0 away to Servette on 12 May. That’s the story of their last fortnight — a decent home win buried under three defeats and a familiar lack of control when games become stretched.
The Servette loss was particularly flat. Lausanne managed only six shots, put one on target and barely asked any questions. Their xG of 0.60 told the same story. They were second-best for most of the afternoon, and the 2-0 scoreline felt deserved. Before that, the 2-1 defeat at Winterthur was another painful one, because they had chances but couldn’t keep the game in check. Away from home, they’ve been too easy to play through. That said, the 3-0 win over Zürich shows what happens when they get on the front foot. They can hurt teams. They just haven’t done it often enough.
At home, Lausanne have actually been solid over the course of the season. Their record at the Stade de la Tuilière reads six wins, five draws and seven defeats, with 32 goals scored and 30 conceded. That’s not elite, but it’s enough to show they’re usually capable of taking the game to opponents on their own pitch. A home tally like that tells you they don’t lack ambition. The problem is consistency. One good performance gets followed by a poor one, and then another. They’ve also gone three matches without a win now, so the mood isn’t exactly buoyant.
Still, there’s enough attacking output here to trust them to create against a shaky Grasshopper back line. Lausanne have scored in bursts all season, and their home numbers are healthier than the overall table might suggest. The flip side? They’ve also been conceding too often, which is why their games keep drifting towards chaos. That’s no bad thing if you’re eyeing goals, but it’s a nervous way to live if you’re trying to close out a season.
Grasshopper Club Zürich Form & Analysis
Grasshopper come into this one off a much-needed 3-2 home win over Winterthur on 12 May, and it was exactly the sort of frantic, uneasy victory that’s become part of their story. They flew out of the blocks through Pajtim Kasami, who scored after seven minutes and then again three minutes later, and they later got goals from Dirk Abels, Young-Jun Lee and another Abels penalty. Even then, they still conceded twice and left the door open. That’s Grasshopper in a nutshell right now. They can score. They can also make everything harder than it should be.
Before that win, the picture was grim. They lost 2-1 at Zürich, 2-0 at home to Servette and 2-1 at home to Luzern. Their cup tie away to Stade-Lausanne-Ouchy also ended in defeat. That’s four losses in five before the Winterthur game, and it’s not the sort of run that inspires confidence on the road. Peter Zeidler will have liked the response against Winterthur, but he won’t be fooled by it. One win doesn’t erase the cracks. Not even close.
Their away record is part of the problem. Grasshopper’s league away form stands at three wins, four draws and 11 defeats, with just 19 goals scored and 39 conceded. That’s a heavy number at the back, and it tells you why they’ve been so vulnerable outside Zürich. They’re not clean-sheet merchants on the road — far from it. Even when they nick a result, they usually leave something behind. The underlying issue is control. Away from home, they don’t keep games where they want them for long enough.
There are some attacking signs, mind you. They’ve scored in enough matches to suggest they can trouble Lausanne, especially with the hosts in a run of three straight defeats. But the defensive end keeps ruining the picture. Five of their last six have seen them concede at least twice, and that’s a nasty habit to carry into a fixture like this. If Lausanne get into their rhythm early, Grasshopper could be in for another uncomfortable evening.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has had a lively edge for a while, and the results back that up. Lausanne beat Grasshopper 3-2 in Zürich on 8 March 2026, which was another example of these teams producing a game with plenty of openings and very little defensive comfort. The meeting before that, in Lausanne on 24 January, finished 1-1. That wasn’t a fluke either. The sides have often been close enough to keep the contest alive deep into the game.
Go a little further back and the same pattern repeats. Grasshopper won 3-1 at home in September 2025, while Lausanne have had their own share of the better moments, including a 3-0 home win in October 2024 and a 1-0 away win in April 2024. Even when the scoreline is tighter, there’s rarely much evidence of either team locking the other out. These meetings tend to carry goals. Plenty of them.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 1/2 here, and it’s hard to argue with that price given the shape of both sides. Lausanne have seen six of their last seven league games go beyond the line, while Grasshopper’s recent matches have been anything but sterile. The H2H trend also leans heavily the same way, with five of the last six meetings clearing 2.5 goals. This one should open up.
The best lean is a 2-1 home win. Lausanne have the stronger home profile and should create enough to get the job done, but they’ve been conceding too often to expect a clean, calm afternoon. Grasshopper can nick a goal — they usually do — yet their away record is far too fragile to trust. If you want a slightly spicier alternative, both teams to score has plenty of appeal too.