Oud-Heverlee Leuven host Royal Antwerp FC on Friday evening in the Belgian Pro League’s Conference League Playoffs, with both sides chasing momentum more than comfort. Antwerp sit fifth in the overall table on 27 points, Leuven sixth on 19, and that gap tells its own story: this is a meeting between a side still trying to impose itself on the playoff picture and another trying to stop the slide from getting worse.
There’s pressure on both benches. Felice Mazzu’s Leuven have spent much of this spell chasing a result that would stick, while Joseph Oosting’s Antwerp arrive with more points and a slightly stronger defensive profile, but also with their own recent wobble after two straight setbacks. The stakes are plain enough. Antwerp want to keep the upper hand in the battle for European places. Leuven need something to arrest a run that’s been going on too long.
These two already know each other well enough, too. Antwerp beat Leuven 2-0 on 18 April, only for Leuven to respond with a 1-0 home win on 22 March earlier in the spring. That kind of split usually hints at a competitive fixture, and Friday’s return carries that same edge. One side is trying to steady itself. The other is trying not to let a decent campaign drift.
Oud-Heverlee Leuven Form & Analysis
Leuven’s recent run has been grim viewing. They lost 1-2 at Standard Liège on 8 May, and that defeat was just the latest chapter in a spell that’s produced one draw and five defeats from their last six outings. Before that trip to Standard, they were held 3-3 away at KVC Westerlo, a game that at least had some life about it, but even that felt more like a firefight than progress. Go back a little further and the picture darkens quickly: home defeats to Charleroi and Westerlo, then that 2-0 reverse at Antwerp, with only a goalless draw at Genk interrupting the slump. That’s not a team in rhythm. Not even close.
The way they’ve been losing matters as much as the results themselves. Leuven have gone seven matches without a win and haven’t kept a clean sheet in five. They’ve been chasing games, hanging on in others, and often doing both at once. Against Standard last time out, they did at least score first-half and early-second-half goals through Roggerio Nyakossi and Henry Lawrence before falling away again. The problem is obvious. They can score in spells, but they don’t protect those moments well enough.
At home, the numbers are ordinary rather than disastrous, and that’s probably the best case you can make for them here. Their league home record stands at four wins, five draws and nine defeats, with 19 goals scored and 25 conceded. That’s a decent enough goals-for total, but the defensive return drags them down badly. Leuven’s home matches have often had an open feel without actually producing comfort for them. They’re capable of nicking chances, and the 1.4 projected xG here gives them a fighting chance of finding the net. Still, you wouldn’t call this a safe base. Far from it.
Royal Antwerp FC Form & Analysis
Antwerp’s form is more complicated than it first looks. The raw results say two defeats in a row, and both were ugly in different ways. They lost 0-1 at home to Charleroi on 10 May, then suffered a heavier 0-5 hammering against Standard Liège on 3 May. That’s a nasty pair of setbacks for any side, especially when the home crowd has already gone quiet. But before that, they’d put together three straight wins and there was substance to those victories. They won 4-2 away at Westerlo, 2-1 at Standard on the road, and 2-0 against Leuven at home. That run showed a team that can travel, strike early, and play with enough edge to punish errors.
The Standard and Charleroi defeats don’t wipe out the better work that came before, but they do expose a problem: Antwerp can be blunt if the flow dries up. Against Charleroi, they actually posted 2.05 xG and created two big chances, only to leave empty-handed after a poor night in front of goal and a missed late penalty from Geoffry Hairemans after VAR awarded the spot-kick. That’s the sort of frustration that lingers. They’re not being steamrollered every week. Sometimes they’re beating themselves.
Away from home, though, Antwerp still carry more credibility than Leuven. Their away record reads five wins, four draws and nine defeats, with 17 goals scored and 19 conceded. That’s not the profile of an explosive travelling side, but it does suggest they’re usually in the game. They can keep it tight enough to compete, and their overall defensive return is better than Leuven’s. The xG projection here has them at 1.1, which fits the idea of a side that should still threaten even if it doesn’t control proceedings. Mind you, they’ve now gone two games without a win and they won’t want that drifting into something bigger.
Head-to-Head
These two have played out a few useful reference points over the past couple of seasons. Antwerp’s 2-0 win over Leuven on 18 April was a clean, controlled job, and it followed a different sort of contest only a month earlier when Leuven edged a 1-0 home win on 22 March. Go back further and the pattern becomes familiar: Antwerp won 3-1 in August 2025, the sides drew 2-2 in February that year, and Leuven also held Antwerp to a 1-1 draw at home in October 2024.
The broader trend leans Antwerp’s way, but not by a huge margin. These fixtures have often been competitive, and that’s why the first goal could matter so much here. Antwerp have opened the scoring in four of the last five meetings, and that says plenty about the shape of the contest. Leuven need to avoid chasing from behind again. If they do, Antwerp usually know how to manage it.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 8/15 for this one. Leuven are flawed, no doubt about it, but they’re at home, and this is exactly the kind of fixture where that still counts. Antwerp have the better overall position and the steadier away record, yet they come in after two losses and haven’t looked especially convincing at either end in the last week.
The pick fits the shape of the game. Leuven’s seven-match winless run is ugly, but they’ve also shown enough at home to keep this from feeling like a straightforward away banker. Antwerp’s away numbers are solid without being dominant, and the expected goal line points to a fairly tight contest. A 1-1 draw feels right. Leuven can nick a goal, Antwerp should get one too, and neither side has done enough recently to inspire much faith in a clean breakthrough. If you want a slightly more ambitious angle, both teams to score has a decent shout as well.