Lille host Le Havre at Stade Pierre-Mauroy on Sunday afternoon in Ligue 1, and the table gives the game a very different edge for each side. Bruno Genesio’s side are up in 4th with 57 points and still chasing a Champions League place, while Didier Digard’s Le Havre sit 14th on 31 points and are trying to keep the pressure off at the wrong end of the standings. For Lille, this is the sort of fixture they’re expected to win if they want to stay in the mix. For Le Havre, it’s a survival test. Plain and simple.
There’s also a sharp contrast in momentum. Lille have gone five league games unbeaten since that loss to Aston Villa in the Europa League knockouts, and they’ve kept a clean sheet in each of their last four domestic wins or draws. Le Havre, by contrast, haven’t won in nine league matches. Nine. They’ve drawn four in a row and come into this trip after conceding four at home to Metz in a mad 4-4 draw. That won’t fill them with much confidence.
The first meeting between these two this season went Lille’s way, too, with a 1-0 away win at Le Havre in late November. That result matters because it fits the wider shape of the matchup: Lille have had the edge for years, and Le Havre have struggled to lay a glove on them. The question now is whether Genesio’s side can turn superiority into something more comfortable on home soil.
Lille Form & Analysis
Lille’s last few weeks have had the feel of a team doing just enough, and then a little more when required. They beat Marseille 2-1 away on 22 March, then lost 2-0 at Aston Villa in the Europa League knockouts four days later. Since then, they’ve settled into control mode. A 3-0 home win over RC Lens was followed by a dull but useful 0-0 against Nice at home, and then came the 4-0 demolition of Toulouse away from home. Last weekend they went to Paris FC and squeezed out a 1-0 win. Not spectacular. Very effective.
That Paris FC result summed Lille up. They weren’t flashy, but they were ruthless when the chance came, with Matías Fernández converting a penalty in the first half and the team then seeing the game out despite Pierre Lees-Melou’s second yellow late on. Their numbers from that match were hardly outrageous — 10 shots, four on target, 0.92 xG — but that’s been part of the story lately. They don’t need to dominate every minute to win. They just need enough control, enough structure, and enough quality in the right moments.
At home, Lille’s record is solid rather than dominant: eight wins, four draws and three defeats, with 23 goals scored and 14 conceded. Those numbers are good, not jaw-dropping, yet they still tell you plenty. They’re hard to break down in their own ground, and they’ve been especially reliable at keeping things tight when the game matters. Four straight clean sheets in the league is no accident. You can play through them, but you can’t do it easily. That’s a strong base in a match like this. Le Havre’s attack won’t frighten them much, and Genesio’s side should trust their defensive shape.
There’s another point worth stressing. Lille have won five league games in a row where they’ve either kept the lead or shut the door late. Call it game management, call it maturity. It’s the kind of habit that wins matches like this. You don’t need fireworks if the opponent’s away record is this poor.
Le Havre Form & Analysis
Le Havre come into this on the back of a total chaos game against Metz. The 4-4 draw had everything — early goals, penalties, momentum swings, the lot. They led, trailed, fought back, and still couldn’t turn it into a win. That’s been the broader problem. Didier Digard’s side keep finding ways to stay alive in matches, but they’re not finishing people off. Before Metz, they drew 1-1 at Angers and 1-1 at Nice. They also drew 1-1 at home to Auxerre and 0-0 against Lyon. Solid? Sometimes. Frustrating? Very much so.
The raw form line is ugly for them. They’ve gone nine league games without a win, and that sort of run tends to eat into confidence one draw at a time. There’s effort there. There’s no shortage of spirit. But results are what matter, and Le Havre just haven’t been getting enough of them. Their attack has at least shown it can nick goals on the road, with a 1-1 draw at Nice and a lively 4-4 against Metz at home, but the defensive side of the picture is far shakier. They’ve gone five straight league matches without a clean sheet, and their away record is especially weak.
That away record is one of the main reasons this fixture leans so heavily toward Lille. Le Havre have taken just eight points from 15 away games, with one win, five draws and nine defeats. They’ve scored only nine goals on the road and conceded 25. That’s a grim combination. You can survive away from home with those numbers if you’re airtight at the back, but Le Havre aren’t. They’re open, they’re vulnerable, and they tend to spend too much time chasing games.
Still, they’re not completely toothless. The fact they’ve scored in five straight matches against Lille’s level of opponent — and in general have enough in them to make a nuisance of themselves — means this isn’t a pure shutout shout. You’d expect them to get a look or two. The problem is what happens when Lille start pinning them back. That’s where things get messy for Digard’s side.
Head-to-Head
The head-to-head record is pretty one-sided, and it’s hard to ignore. Lille beat Le Havre 1-0 away in November, won 3-0 in Le Havre in September 2024, and have also beaten them 3-0 at home in February 2024 and 2-0 away in October 2023. Go back a bit further and the theme stays the same. Lille have tended to control this fixture, while Le Havre have rarely found a way through.
There is one warning sign for Lille, and it’s the 2-1 defeat at home in February 2025. That’s the lone recent blemish in an otherwise comfortable run against this opponent. Even so, the broader pattern still favours the hosts. Lille usually score first, usually keep Le Havre at arm’s length, and usually make this look less complicated than it ought to be.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Home Win at 2/5 here. Our football tips hub is a useful companion here because it pulls together our main football tips hub with singles, goals picks and combo angles in one place. It’s short, sure, but it still looks the right side of the line. Lille are higher in the table, far better at home, and they’ve got the cleaner recent form. Le Havre haven’t won in nine league games and their away record is among the weakest in the division. That’s a brutal combination when you’re going to one of the league’s more reliable sides.
The 2-1 correct score feels fair, even if Lille’s home defending and Le Havre’s away numbers point to something a little more controlled. Why not a straightforward 2-0? Because Le Havre do usually find a goal somewhere, and Lille’s last two league home games have been 0-0 and 3-0 rather than a constant stream of open, end-to-end matches. But Lille should still have enough quality to get the job done. If you want a slightly safer route, Lille to win to nil is tempting, though the price will reflect that.