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Royale Union Saint-Gilloise host KAA Gent in the Pro League Championship Round on Wednesday evening, 22 April 2026, with the league leaders trying to keep their grip on top spot and Gent chasing a statement result that would haul them deeper into the race behind them. It’s a very different sort of pressure on either side. Union are protecting a season that has already turned into a march, while Gent are trying to stop their campaign from drifting into something more ordinary.
The gap in the table tells its own story. Royale Union Saint-Gilloise sit first with 42 points from 22 wins, nine draws and only two defeats, and their home record is even more one-sided: 16 wins, one draw and no losses, with 35 scored and only six conceded on their own ground. Gent, by contrast, are fifth on 25 points and arrive with a much shakier away profile. They’ve taken just five wins on the road all season and have already dropped seven away matches. You don’t need a microscope to see who the bookmakers are leaning towards.
That said, the recent head-to-head meetings have been lively enough to keep Gent interested. These sides drew 1-1 in December, Union won 3-2 and 3-1 at home in 2024 and 2025, and the Brussels side have gone 14 straight meetings without defeat against Gent. So the visitors know they usually need a good start just to stay in the game. That’s easier said than done at this ground.
Union come into this one in ruthless shape. Their last six matches have all ended in victory, and the way they’ve been winning tells you plenty about their control of games. Club Brugge were beaten 2-1 at home on 19 April in a proper test, and even if the xG figures were fairly close at 0.74 to 0.63, Union still found the decisive moments. Brandon Mechele opened the scoring, Mateo Biondic levelled, and Besfort Zeneli struck late to settle it. That wasn’t a runaway. It was something better. A mature win.
Before that, they went to KV Mechelen and came away with a 1-0 victory on 12 April, then edged Sint-Truidense 1-0 at home on 4 April. Go back a little further and the pattern is the same: a 3-1 away win at Sint-Truidense on 22 March, a 2-0 home win over FCV Dender on 14 March, and a 2-1 victory against KRC Genk on 7 March. Different opponents, same outcome. They keep finding a way. Fifteen games unbeaten now, with 15 without a loss stretching back to that 0-2 defeat to Bayern Munich in January. That’s not just good form. That’s control.
At home, the numbers are almost absurd. Sixteen wins, one draw, zero defeats. Thirty-five goals scored, only six conceded. That’s the kind of home record that changes the mood of a league. Union don’t merely defend their ground, they smother opponents there. The clean sheet count is especially telling; when they aren’t winning comfortably, they’re still usually shutting the door. David Hubert’s side don’t need a storm of chances to win either. They’re comfortable in tight, ugly games, and they’ve shown against Brugge and Mechelen that they can drag opponents into a low-scoring fight and still come out on top.
The flip side? They’ve not exactly been flooding games with chances in every outing. Against Brugge, they managed just 15 shots and no big chances, and still won. That tells you two things. First, they’re efficient. Second, they’re so good defensively that they don’t need to dominate the box to stay in command. Gent will have to be sharp if they want to turn this into a proper contest, because Union aren’t giving up much at either end.
Gent’s recent run is less convincing and a bit more uneven. They were held 0-0 at home by Sint-Truidense on 19 April, and the underlying numbers didn’t flatter them much: just 0.29 xG, only two shots on target, and three big chances conceded. That’s a poor attacking return for a team trying to keep pace in the Championship Round. Before that came a 3-1 defeat away to Anderlecht on 12 April, a result that exposed the gap between Gent’s better spells and their weaker road performances. They did score, but they never really controlled the match.
There was another home draw before that, 1-1 with KV Mechelen on 6 April, and that followed a decent away win at FCV Dender on 22 March. Gent had been in better nick then, with wins over Zulte Waregem and Mechelen either side of that. Still, the current picture is less bullish. They haven’t won in three, and they’ve only taken one point from their last two league matches. That’s not disastrous. It’s just not the sort of form you want before a trip to the division’s strongest home side.
Their overall away record is respectable rather than daunting: five wins, four draws and seven defeats, with 23 goals scored and 29 conceded. The goal tally away from home is decent enough, which is why you can’t dismiss them completely. Gent can score, and they’ve done it often enough on the road to keep opponents honest. But they also give too much away. Seven away defeats is a warning sign, and 29 concessions on the road is exactly the sort of number Union love to prey on.
Rik De Mil’s side need a fast start, because if they fall behind here, the game can get away from them quickly. That’s the problem at Union. Sit too deep and you invite wave after wave. Step out too high and you risk getting picked apart. It’s a nasty balancing act. Gent haven’t convinced lately that they can solve it.
Union’s grip on this fixture has been strong for a while. They’ve gone 14 meetings without a defeat against Gent, and the recent results lean heavily in their favour. In December, the teams shared a 1-1 draw in Brussels, but before that Union beat Gent 3-2 away in August 2025 and 3-1 at home in May. They also won 3-0 in Ghent in April 2025 and 3-1 away again in December 2024, with a 3-2 cup win at home in between. That’s a brutal sequence for Gent to look at. Brutal and familiar.
One pattern stands out. Union usually get on the scoresheet first. That has happened in five of the last six meetings, and it’s exactly why Gent can’t afford a sluggish opening spell. Once Union dictate the tempo, they tend to stay in charge. Gent’s best hope is to make this scrappy and keep it level for as long as possible. Easier said than done.
We’re backing Royale Union Saint-Gilloise to win at 4/9 here. It’s short, yes, but it’s still the right side of the line. Union are perfect at home this season, they’ve won their last six matches overall, and Gent arrive without a win in three and with a poor away record for a side visiting the league leaders. That’s enough for a clear call.
The projected 2-1 scoreline feels fair. Union’s home defence is excellent, but Gent do have enough going forward to nick one if the game opens up at all. Still, the balance of the match points in one direction. Union should control it, create the better chances, and find a way through. If you wanted a slightly bigger price, Union to win and both teams to score would be the obvious alternative. But the straight home win is the cleanest play.
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