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Oud-Heverlee Leuven welcome KVC Westerlo to the King Power at Den Dreef on Tuesday evening, 21 April 2026, in the Pro League Conference League Playoffs, with both sides trying to keep their European push alive. It’s early enough in the post-season phase for momentum to matter, and late enough for nerves to start biting. One good result can change the tone of the whole run. One bad night can leave a club chasing shadows.
For Oud-Heverlee Leuven, the task is simple on paper and awkward in practice: sharpen up after a mixed spell and find a way to turn home advantage into something tangible. Westerlo arrive with a bit more wind in their sails, though they were checked by KRC Genk in their last outing. That should make this a lively, open contest. Goals feel very much in play.
The two teams already know each other well from the league campaign, and there’s a clear thread running through those meetings. Westerlo have had the upper hand more often than not, including a 1-0 win in Leuven on 7 March. OHL won’t need reminding. They’ve got to break that pattern somehow, and that means being braver in the final third without leaving themselves exposed at the back.
Felice Mazzu’s side come into this one with more questions than answers. Their last six have been a proper mixed bag, with a 1-0 home win over Royal Antwerp sandwiched between defeats and a goalless draw at KRC Genk. The last match, a 2-0 loss away to Antwerp on 18 April, was a harsh one. They were second best for long spells, produced very little going forward and never really looked in control. Three games without a win now. That’s the kind of spell that starts to nag.
The home picture isn’t exactly reassuring either. Standard Liège came to Leuven on 4 April and left with a 3-1 win, which exposed some soft edges in OHL’s defensive work. Before that, though, there was a bit of life: the 1-0 victory over Royal Antwerp on 22 March showed they can still dig in and find a result when needed, while the 0-0 at Genk suggested they’re not easy to break down when the shape is right. The problem is consistency. One week they’re compact and hard-working, the next they’re open and get punished.
What makes OHL awkward to trust is the split personality in their attacking play. They’re capable of creating enough to score, but the finishing has been patchy and the build-up can go flat when the opponent forces them wide. At the other end, they’ve been conceding too many clean looks. Against Antwerp last time out, their shot count told the story: five attempts, only two on target, and a miserable 0.26 xG. That won’t scare anybody. If Mazzu’s side are going to take control of this tie, they need a sharper first pass and far more presence in the box. Otherwise they’ll just be chasing the game again.
Westerlo’s recent run has been livelier, even if it’s not flawless. They beat Charleroi 2-0 on 5 April, then went to Standard Liège and won 2-1 a week later. That’s a tidy away result. It was followed by a narrow 1-2 home defeat to Genk on 18 April, but even in that loss they found a route back into the match before being edged out. Under Issame Charai, they’ve looked like a side willing to play forward and take their chances. That can hurt teams in this section of the playoffs.
Their away form deserves respect. The victory at Standard wasn’t a smash-and-grab; they stayed in the game, struck when it mattered and carried enough threat to make the result feel deserved. On the road, they’ve also drawn 0-0 at the same venue in late March, which hints at a team that can switch between control and damage limitation depending on the opponent. That flexibility matters in a playoff group where the margins are thin. Can they keep producing in that range? So far, yes more often than no.
There are, though, limits to their game. Genk’s 2-1 win over them on 18 April was a reminder that Westerlo can be opened up if the opposition keeps the tempo high. Their xG in that match, 0.94, wasn’t especially convincing either, and they allowed 2.60 at the other end. That’s a worry. Still, they’ve shown enough attacking edge over the last month to feel like a real threat here, especially against an OHL side that’s looked vulnerable whenever the game becomes stretched. A team that’s scored in each of the last two league-phase playoff matches doesn’t arrive to sit in a shell. Westerlo won’t.
This fixture has leaned Westerlo’s way over the past couple of seasons, and that matters here. They’ve beaten Oud-Heverlee Leuven three times in the recent run of meetings, including the 1-0 victory in Leuven on 7 March 2026 and a 2-0 home win in October. There was also a 2-0 away success at Den Dreef in May 2025. That’s a strong pattern, and it’s not the sort of thing you ignore lightly.
The broader head-to-head picture has been tight enough for the games to stay competitive, but not necessarily rich in goals. Five of the last six meetings have finished under 2.5 goals, which fits the feeling that neither side tends to run away with this one. Westerlo have often found the first goal too. That’s another edge OHL will want to fix quickly if they don’t want the match to drift away from them early.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 for this one, and it’s the clearest call on the board. OHL have been too inconsistent to inspire full confidence, but they’ve still got enough attacking moments at home to nick a goal. Westerlo, for their part, have scored in recent playoff matches and should fancy themselves against a back line that’s been breached too often.
The xG projection leans the same way, with OHL at 1.4 and Westerlo at 1.3. That points to a fairly even game, not a cagey one. A 1-1 draw feels right, and it fits the recent shape of both sides better than a clean sheet either way. The only slight tension is that the head-to-head has often come in under 2.5 goals, so this isn’t a wild over bet. Still, BTTS lands neatly with the way both teams are currently playing. If you want a side angle, under 4.5 cards has some appeal, but the main play is BTTS.
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