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RSC Anderlecht host Sint-Truidense VV in the Pro League Championship Round on Thursday evening, 21 May 2026, with both clubs still chasing a strong finish in the upper end of the table. Anderlecht sit fourth on 30 points, while Sint-Truidense are third on 40. That gap matters. It means the visitors arrive with a firmer grip on the higher spots, while Anderlecht are trying to stop this run of frustrating results from dragging them into a miserable end to the campaign.
For Jérémy Taravel’s side, the story is one of wasted opportunities and a defence that keeps leaving the door open. They haven’t won in six and, even though the last three have brought a small uptick in resilience, the bare numbers remain awkward. Sint-Truidense, under Wouter Vrancken, have been more stable and more productive, especially away from home where they own the second-best record in the division. They won the reverse fixture 2-0 at home on 23 April. That won’t be forgotten in Brussels.
There’s also a neat bit of symmetry here. Anderlecht’s home form is respectable without being dominant, while Sint-Truidense’s away output has been one of the better travelling records in the league. Both sides have scored enough to keep games alive, both have shown they can be loose at the back, and the meeting at Lotto Park should reflect that. Goals feel likely. That’s the angle.
Anderlecht are limping rather than collapsing, but it doesn’t look great. Their last six have brought no wins at all: a 2-2 home draw with KV Mechelen on 17 May, a 1-1 draw away to Gent on 10 May, and a 1-1 draw at Union Saint-Gilloise in the cup on 14 May, sandwiched around three straight league defeats. They lost 1-3 at home to Club Brugge on 3 May, then 1-3 again at home against Union on 26 April, before falling 2-0 away to Sint-Truidense on 23 April. That’s a messy sequence. The one positive is that they’ve at least stopped the bleeding a little, with three matches unbeaten since that last defeat. Still, they’re drawing their way through a rough patch, and a draw doesn’t fix much when the bigger issue is failing to turn chances into wins.
At home, Anderlecht’s league record is decent on paper: nine wins, five draws and five defeats from 19 matches, with 32 scored and 23 conceded. That’s not the profile of a team getting rolled over at its own ground. But it’s also not the record of a side that can bully opponents. They’ve been open enough to make every game feel live. Their recent home displays fit that pattern. Against Mechelen, they led twice but couldn’t shut the game down, ending 2-2. Against Brugge and Union, they were punished for defensive lapses and never really recovered. You can point to attacking intent, sure. Myron Van Brederode, Nathan-Dylan Saliba and Ilay Camara all got on the scoresheet against Mechelen. That’s useful. But if you’re scoring and still not protecting leads, you’re making life harder than it needs to be.
The deeper issue is that Anderlecht are conceding first far too often and then chasing matches. They’ve gone six without a win, and that’s not a minor wobble. It’s a proper slide. Their home xG numbers aren’t disastrous, but the balance is off: the team keeps producing enough to score once, maybe twice, yet the back line keeps inviting pressure. That’s why the games keep tilting towards both teams getting chances. They’re rarely dull. They’re often uncomfortable. And they’re not showing enough authority to suggest they’ll suddenly tighten up now.
Sint-Truidense have been less spectacular than their league position suggests, but they’ve been more effective than Anderlecht. Their last six have brought a useful mix of results: a 1-1 home draw with Gent on 16 May, a 2-0 defeat away to Club Brugge on 9 May, then wins over Union Saint-Gilloise and KV Mechelen before that 2-0 home win against Anderlecht on 23 April. Add in the goalless draw at Gent on 19 April and you get a team that’s been capable of mixing it at the top end of the Championship Round without ever looking entirely safe. They’ve taken points, they’ve upset stronger names, and they’ve shown enough away know-how to keep themselves in the race.
The away record is the eye-catching part. Nine wins, three draws and seven defeats from 19 away matches, with 28 goals scored and 20 conceded, is strong enough to command respect. Second-best away form in the division doesn’t happen by accident. It tells you they travel well, and they’re not the sort of side that sits back and waits for luck. They’ve been willing to play, and that has brought reward. The 4-1 win at Mechelen on 26 April was the best of the lot, a proper statement away from home. Yes, they were blanked by Club Brugge on 9 May, but that’s no disgrace. Brugge can suffocate teams. What matters more is that Vrancken’s side were back on the front foot immediately in the next match against Gent, where they created enough to feel annoyed by the draw.
The Gent game was a reminder that Sint-Truidense can build pressure and still leave the door ajar at the other end. They posted 2.09 xG and had three big chances, yet only drew 1-1. Wilfried Kanga opened the scoring before Loïc Mbe Soh added the equaliser, and they were denied by a VAR call early on as well. That’s the kind of performance that gives away the shape of this team. They’ll threaten. They’ll ask questions. But they don’t always kill games off when they’re on top. Even so, they’ve got enough punch to hurt an Anderlecht defence that has been leaking goals for weeks. If they get the first clean look, they fancy themselves.
This fixture has had a clear recent lean, and not all of it favours Anderlecht. Sint-Truidense won the most recent meeting 2-0 at home on 23 April 2026, a result that will still be fresh in the memory of both camps. Before that, Anderlecht beat them 2-1 in December 2025 and the sides drew 2-2 in October. There’s been a decent amount of goalmouth action in the meetings overall, and that fits the wider pattern between them. Neither side tends to keep the lid on for long.
Go a little further back and Anderlecht have generally had the better of the series, with several home wins across the last few seasons. But the current picture is tighter. Sint-Truidense have already shown they can unsettle Anderlecht, and given the visitors’ away record this season, they won’t arrive in Brussels feeling like outsiders. That 2-0 win in April wasn’t a fluke. It looked deserved.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/15 here, and it’s the cleanest angle on the board. Anderlecht have scored in enough of their recent games to keep this moving, even when they’ve been poor, and Sint-Truidense rarely come to a scrap without creating chances of their own. The key point is simple: both defences have been giving something away. Anderlecht’s home record includes 23 conceded in 19 league games, while Sint-Truidense have been exposed enough on the road to keep the market alive. This shouldn’t be cagey for long.
A 1-2 away win feels the likeliest scoreline. Sint-Truidense have the stronger away numbers, the better league position, and the sharper recent result in this exact matchup. Anderlecht will probably find a goal — they usually do at home — but their habit of leaving gaps is hard to ignore. If you want a secondary angle, over 2.5 goals has obvious appeal too, though BTTS feels safer given the way both sides have been playing.
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