Olympique Lyonnais host Stade Rennais at the Groupama Stadium on Sunday evening in a Ligue 1 meeting that has real weight at both ends of the European race. Lyon sit third on 57 points, Rennes are fifth on 56, and with only one point between them this is the sort of game that can change the shape of the top four picture in a hurry. A win for Paulo Fonseca’s side would give them breathing room in the chase for Champions League qualification. For Franck Haise and Rennes, three points on the road would be a huge statement and could push them right into the heart of the battle for those continental places.
There’s also a neat rhythm to the timing. Lyon come in off a narrow but valuable 3-2 home win over Auxerre, while Rennes arrived from a 2-1 home victory against Nantes. Both sides have momentum. Both know a draw doesn’t really do much. That usually leads to a sharper, riskier kind of game. You’d expect chances at both ends. Probably goals too.
The other thing that jumps out is how closely matched they are going forward. Lyon have scored 48 and conceded 32 in the league, while Rennes are a touch more explosive with 54 goals scored but have also given up 42. That’s a big clue. Neither side is built to sit back and play out a sterile 0-0. This feels more like a contest where one goal opens the door and the rest follows.
Olympique Lyonnais Form & Analysis
Lyon’s recent run has been a proper mixed bag, but the direction of travel is positive. They beat Auxerre 3-2 at home on 25 April, which followed an eye-catching 2-1 win away to Paris Saint-Germain a week earlier. Before that came a controlled 2-0 home success over Lorient, and a goalless draw at Angers. The only blemishes in the latest stretch were the 2-1 home defeat to Monaco and the 2-0 loss to Celta Vigo in Europe. That’s the story, really: when Lyon are on, they look dangerous and decisive. When they lose control, they can be punished.
That Auxerre win told you plenty about their ceiling. Lyon created 2.11 expected goals, conceded only 0.52, and had the sort of attacking authority that makes a home side feel inevitable once they get into rhythm. Roman Yaremchuk, Sinaly Diomandé, Corentin Tolisso and Bryan Okoh all got on the scoresheet across a frantic evening. It wasn’t spotless defending, not at all, but there was enough punch to outweigh the mess. At home, that’s been a theme. They’ve taken 34 points from 15 matches at the Groupama Stadium, with 11 wins, one draw and only three defeats. Twenty-six goals scored and just 12 conceded at home is a strong base. That won’t frighten Rennes, but it gives Lyon a real edge.
The trend line is clear enough: Lyon have won three of their last four league matches and are unbeaten in four. They’ve also got a useful habit of scoring first in this fixture type, and that matters when you’re at home against a side that likes to attack back. Still, the occasional wobble is there. Monaco exposed them, and Celta did too. Lyon are good, but they’re not bulletproof. Not by a long way.
Stade Rennais Form & Analysis
Rennes arrive with confidence and a little bit of swagger. Their last four league games have all ended in victory, and the sequence has been varied enough to show they can win in different ways. They edged Nantes 2-1 at home on 26 April, hammered Strasbourg 3-0 away, beat Angers 2-1 at home and, in the most chaotic of the lot, came through 4-3 away at Brest. Before that, they drew 0-0 with Metz and lost 2-1 at home to Lille. Since that defeat, they’ve gone five league games unbeaten. That’s decent form. More than decent, actually.
The away numbers explain why Rennes are taken seriously on the road. They’ve picked up 25 points from 15 away matches, with seven wins, four draws and four defeats. They’ve scored 26 away goals and conceded 26, which is very Rennes in one line: capable of hurting anyone, but always leaving the door open a little. The clean sheet at Strasbourg stands out because it’s not the norm for this team. The Brest win was the opposite story — wide open, breathless, and decided by who kept swinging hardest. Franck Haise will know that profile well enough. His side can score in bunches. They can also give up too much territory.
The chance creation numbers fit that picture. Rennes have 54 goals in the league and their attack is one of the strongest in this top-five battle, but 42 conceded is the weak spot. They don’t travel like outsiders, though. Far from it. If they get enough of the ball in Lyon’s half, they’ll fancy their chances of landing a punch. The question is whether they can avoid being dragged into a trade of blows that suits Lyon just as much. That’s the danger. On the road, Rennes usually keep it lively. Sometimes too lively.
Head-to-Head
These two don’t do dull very often. Their last eight league meetings have produced a proper split of results and a fair few goals, with Rennes winning 3-1 at home in September 2025 and Lyon responding with a 4-1 home win in April 2025. Before that came more of the same: Rennes won 3-0 in August 2024, Lyon lost 3-2 at home in January 2024, and the pendulum has kept swinging back and forth across the seasons.
The pattern that really matters is the goal count. Seven of the last nine meetings have seen both teams score, and eight of the last nine have gone over 2.5 goals. That’s not a fluke. These sides bring out the worst defensive habits in each other. One clean sheet in this sequence would be the surprise. One cagey 0-0 would be almost out of character.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 here, and it looks the strongest play on the board. If you want more detail on each-way betting, our each-way betting guide breaks down each-way betting if you want a quick refresher on split-stake betting. Lyon have scored in four straight league matches and come into this after putting three past Auxerre and beating PSG away. Rennes, meanwhile, have found the net in each of their last four league wins and have only failed to score once in their last six. Both attacks are in enough nick to cause trouble, and both defences have shown cracks.
The xG projection is a nice fit for that view as well: Lyon at 1.6, Rennes at 1.5. That points away from a flat tactical battle and towards a game with chances at both ends. A 2-1 Lyon win is the call, with home advantage and their stronger record at the Groupama Stadium just tipping it their way. If you want a second angle, over 2.5 goals also has plenty of appeal, but BTTS is the cleaner, safer route.