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Lommel SK host RFC Liège on Thursday evening in the Pro League Relegation/Promotion Playoff, and there’s plenty riding on it for both sides. In this kind of tie, every point feels heavy. Lommel want to protect home turf and stay in control of their survival push, while RFC Liège arrive with the confidence of a side that’s just put together three wins in a row and fancy their chances of spoiling the party.
The context is simple enough. This is the sort of playoff football where form can flip quickly, but margins are tight and nerves tend to do the rest. Lommel have been in and out lately, winning two and losing two across their last four, while RFC Liège have shaken off a rough spell with a strong three-game surge. That’s what makes this one so live. One team needs rhythm. The other has found it.
There’s also a familiar edge to this pairing. RFC Liège have made life awkward for Lommel in recent meetings, and that history matters a little even when current form is doing most of the talking. Still, Lommel are at home, and in a playoff that usually counts for something. A lot, actually.
Lommel’s recent run has been messy enough to leave supporters restless. They went to K. Beerschot V.A. on 17 April and lost 2-1, a match that started with a penalty goal from Bas Van den Eynden inside six minutes but drifted away from them after that. Before that came a frustrating home defeat to Club NXT U23, a 1-0 loss on 11 April that really stood out because Lommel couldn’t turn any of their territory into goals. That one hurt. Home matches are supposed to steady you, not drain you.
Yet the story of their month isn’t all bad. Lommel beat RWDM Brussels 3-2 at home on 4 April and then got past Royal Francs Borains 3-1 at the same ground on 15 March. Those were proper attacking wins, the kind that remind you they can open teams up when the rhythm clicks. Sandwiched between them were two draws, 2-2 at KAA Gent Reserve U23 and 1-1 at home to KV Kortrijk, so even when they weren’t winning, they were staying in games. That matters in a playoff. Teams that don’t fold tend to find a way back into the picture.
The problem is the clean sheet issue. Lommel have gone six straight matches without one, and that’s a blunt warning sign before a playoff home tie. Their most recent outing at Beerschot was a good example of the gap between effort and control: they were outshot 19-9, conceded more big chances, and spent too much of the evening chasing phases rather than dictating them. They’re not short of threat, though. The home attack has been lively enough in spells, and the scoring pattern suggests they usually give themselves a chance. They’ve also been involved in plenty of open games, which fits the 3-2 and 3-1 results at home.
That’s the tension with Lommel. They can score, but they don’t shut doors. And in a match like this, that’s a dangerous habit.
RFC Liège come in with a very different feel. Their last three matches have all ended in victory, and the sequence has the look of a side that’s found the right tempo at the right time. They beat KAS Eupen 2-1 at home on 17 April, followed that with a 2-0 win away at KAA Gent Reserve U23 on 12 April, then edged OC Charleroi 2-1 at home on 5 April. That’s not a soft run, either. They’ve had to work for it. But they’ve done the job.
Before that, though, Liège had a wobble. A 4-0 loss away to SK Beveren on 21 March was a heavy one, and the 1-0 home defeat to K. Beerschot V.A. on 14 March showed they weren’t always cutting through stubborn opponents. They also drew 1-1 away at Patro Eisden Maasmechelen on 10 March. So there’s no point dressing them up as invincible. They’ve had to recover from a poor patch. They have recovered, though, and that’s the important bit.
Their away form is decent enough to make this a serious contest. The win at KAA Gent Reserve U23 was tidy, controlled and built on a stronger attacking edge than the scoreline alone suggests. They didn’t have to chase the game much, and that can be vital on the road. Mind you, the Beveren defeat showed the ceiling when things go wrong. If Liège get stretched early and have to defend too deep, the cracks can appear quickly.
Still, this is a side with confidence and a bit of steel. They’ve been finding goals at a good rate lately, and they’re not arriving in Lommel just to sit back. They’ll believe they can hurt a home defence that’s been leaking for weeks. Can they do it often enough to take control? That’s the question.
This fixture has leaned RFC Liège’s way in recent years, and that won’t be ignored by either dressing room. Liège beat Lommel 1-0 in January 2026, did the same in a 1-0 home win in September 2025, and also won 2-0 in Lommel back in January 2025. There was a 1-1 draw in October 2024, but the broader pattern is clear enough: RFC Liège have had the upper hand.
That history nudges the mood a bit, especially because Lommel haven’t managed a clean sheet against them in the recent sequence. Even so, the meetings have tended to stay fairly tight. One home win for Lommel from the older set, a 4-1 success in March 2024, is the reminder that this isn’t a one-way rivalry. But right now, the balance tilts toward Liège making things awkward again.
We’re backing Home Win at 4/6 here. It’s not a flashy price, but it’s the right side of the line. Lommel’s home results have been good enough to justify trust, with wins over RWDM Brussels and Royal Francs Borains showing they can still raise their level when it matters. RFC Liège are on a strong run, no doubt, yet they’ve also shown a vulnerability away from home when forced into a fight. This one feels like a close contest that Lommel edge at their own ground.
The 2-1 correct score looks live. That fits the xG projection too, with Lommel at 1.6 and RFC Liège at 1.2, and it matches the broader shape of both teams: Lommel can score, Liège can score, and neither defence has looked watertight enough to lock this down. If you want a small alternative, Both Teams to Score is the obvious angle, but the home side’s extra edge at kickoff time is the call here.
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