Randers FC host Odense Boldklub on Monday evening, 11 May 2026, in the Danish Superliga relegation round, and there’s plenty on the line for both clubs. This is the kind of fixture that can drag a team into safety or leave them sweating for another week. Randers want to steady themselves after a stop-start spell and use home turf to pull clear of danger. OB arrive with their own survival pressure, but also with a bit more rhythm in the most dangerous part of the pitch.
The first meeting between these sides in this phase went OB’s way, a 3-1 win in Odense on 19 April. That result matters here. It gave Alexander Zorniger’s side a psychological edge and, just as importantly, a reminder that Randers can be opened up when the tempo rises. Yet this is a different setting. Randers at home are usually a tougher nut to crack, and they’ll feel this is the sort of night where a narrow, scrappy win can change the tone of their season. That won’t come easily.
Randers FC Form & Analysis
Randers’ recent run has been a bit of a mixed bag, but there’s a small lift after their 1-0 home win over Vejle on 3 May. It was hardly elegant. They needed a penalty from Elies Mahmoud to get across the line, and the match had a strange edge to it with Cyril Edudzi sent off in the first half after a VAR review. Still, a win is a win. Before that, they had gone to Silkeborg and lost 2-0, shared a 2-2 draw at home with FC Fredericia, and suffered a 3-1 defeat away to OB. The picture is of a side that can compete, then drift, then compete again. There’s no real consistency there.
That sequence also shows their ceiling and their problem. Randers can create moments — the Vejle game featured 10 shots, four big chances and 1.14 xG — but they’re not building pressure for long stretches. Against Silkeborg away, they were second best and paid for it. Against Fredericia at home, they let a lead contest slip into a draw. Against FC København on 12 April, they lost 2-1 at home, another reminder that they’re not quite dominant enough to control matches for 90 minutes. Three defeats, one draw and one win from their last five league games is fine for survival work, but it doesn’t scream authority. Not at all.
At home this season, Randers have been sturdy enough without being convincing, and that’s the key point. They’ve generally been more reliable at their own ground than on the road, but the evidence from recent games says they’re still allowing opponents into the contest. The Red Card to Edudzi last time out adds a wrinkle too. If Randers lose control of the middle third, OB will fancy their chances of hurting them. On the flip side, Randers have still found ways to score in home fixtures, and that gives this match a live, open feel rather than a cagey one.
Odense Boldklub Form & Analysis
OB arrive with a form line that’s messy but dangerous. Their last six league games have produced two wins, two draws and two losses, and the sequence tells its own story. They beat FC Fredericia 2-0 away on 26 April, which was a proper professional away display. Before that, they were edged out 2-1 at FC København, then beat Randers 3-1 at home, lost 3-1 at Silkeborg, and beat Fredericia 1-0 at home earlier in the month. Then came the blow last Sunday: a 3-2 home defeat to Silkeborg in a game that was wild, open and loaded with chances.
That Silkeborg match was a pretty clear snapshot of OB under Alexander Zorniger. They’re aggressive, they go after games, and they don’t mind turning matches into shootouts. The numbers from that defeat were huge: 3.79 xG, nine big chances and 16 shots. They scored twice through Jens Martin Gammelby and Noah Ganaus, but still lost because they couldn’t shut the door, even before Nicolas Bürgy was sent off in the second half. That’s OB in a nutshell right now. They can generate pressure, and they can score. They can also leave the back end exposed. It’s a risky way to live, but it keeps their games alive.
Away from home, OB have been capable of producing results. They beat Fredericia 2-0 on 26 April and scored twice at FC København on 22 April, even if they left empty-handed in a 2-1 defeat. That tells you they don’t travel timidly. They’ve got enough forward thrust to nick goals away from home, and that’s why this BTTS angle has traction. Mind you, there’s a downside to that same attacking appetite: they’ve conceded in three of their last four away matches, and once the game opens up, they’re rarely comfortable shutting things down. You wouldn’t trust them to protect a one-goal lead for long. They haven’t earned that trust.
Head-to-Head
OB have had the better of this fixture for a while, and the most recent evidence points the same way. They beat Randers 3-1 on 19 April, and that came after a 3-2 OB win in August 2025. Earlier meetings also leaned their way, with a 2-0 win in a friendly and a pair of league victories in 2024 and 2023. Randers did hold them to a 0-0 draw in November 2025, so this isn’t a total one-way street, but OB have lost just once in the last ten head-to-heads according to the record available.
There’s also a clear habit in this matchup: OB tend to strike first. They’ve been the first to score in six of the last seven meetings, and that matters here because Randers often have to react rather than dictate. If OB start fast again, this could become a very awkward night for the home side. That won’t surprise anyone who’s watched these two lately.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 for this one. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the Bet365 early payout page covers Bet365 early payout rules if you want the details behind that feature. It’s the cleanest angle on the board. Randers have found the net in enough recent matches to suggest they’ll nick one here, while OB have been scoring freely enough away from home to threaten again. The xG projection is lively too — Randers 1.5, OB 1.4 — which fits a game where both attacks should get chances.
The 2-1 scoreline feels right. Randers should have enough at home to edge the territory battle, but OB won’t go quietly and their recent away output says they’re good for a goal. If you wanted a slightly bolder play, over 2.5 goals also has a case, though BTTS is the safer way to go. The numbers, and the way both teams play, point the same way.