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Shimizu S-Pulse welcome Cerezo Osaka to the J1 League, West on Wednesday morning, 6 May 2026, and it’s a meeting that already carries a bit of bite. Both sides arrive with plenty still to prove, and neither has been running away from anyone lately. Shimizu have just snapped out of a wobble with a gritty away win at Kyoto Sanga FC, while Cerezo are unbeaten in two but haven’t won in three. That gives this one a familiar league feel: two teams with decent attacking numbers, both carrying a few defensive doubts.
There’s also a recent history between them that keeps pointing to goals. Cerezo have had the better of the head-to-head in recent seasons, but these fixtures rarely stay quiet for long. Shimizu will want to use home turf to steady themselves after a stop-start spell, while Arthur Papas’ side need a sharper edge if they’re to turn draws into wins. It’s early May, the table pressure is starting to matter, and both clubs know a flat result here won’t do much for momentum.
Takayuki Yoshida’s side come into this one with a mixed but messy sort of rhythm. Their most recent outing was the best kind of response: a 2-1 win away at Kyoto Sanga FC on 2 May, sealed by goals from Marco Túlio, Zento Uno and Yudai Shimamoto after Barreto was sent off before the break. That made it a gutsy result as much as a polished one. Before that, though, Shimizu had lost at home to V-Varen Nagasaki, gone down 2-0 to Nagoya Grampus at their own ground, and only managed a 1-1 draw away at Sanfrecce Hiroshima. It’s been a bit erratic. Not awful, not convincing either.
The wider picture is just as uneven. In their last six league matches, Shimizu have managed two wins, one draw and three defeats, and the defeats have all carried a warning sign. They lost 2-0 away at Vissel Kobe, were beaten 2-0 at home by Nagoya, and then let V-Varen Nagasaki leave with a win. The one thing they do keep showing is a willingness to score. They’ve found the net in four of those six, and the away win at Nagasaki plus the result in Kyoto suggest there’s enough threat to trouble most teams in this section. Still, they’re without a clean sheet in four matches now. That won’t fill Yoshida with confidence.
Their home form is the part that needs work, because this is where they should be setting the tone. With no standings data available, we can’t dress it up with league position or a perfect ground record. What we can say is that the recent home performances have been thin. Two home defeats in a row, both without scoring, point to a side that’s not controlling games at their own stadium. The attacking flashes are there, but the defensive base keeps wobbling. If Shimizu are going to get anything here, they’ll need a much cleaner first hour than they produced against Nagoya or V-Varen Nagasaki.
Cerezo Osaka arrive with a little more structure, even if the results haven’t been flawless. Their last match was a 1-1 draw at home to Avispa Fukuoka on 3 May, a game in which they didn’t have much control on the ball but still found a way to stay level. Before that came another draw, this time 0-0 away at Vissel Kobe. Those two results stretched their unbeaten run to two, but there’s an asterisk: they’ve only scored once across those matches. That’s the blunt truth. And it matters.
Before the recent pair of draws, Arthur Papas’ men had a better stretch. They beat Kyoto Sanga FC 3-0 at home, won 1-0 away at Gamba Osaka, and then lost 2-1 away at Sanfrecce Hiroshima. That gives them a last-six return of two wins, two draws and two defeats. Fairly balanced. Fairly ordinary, too. But the important detail is that the wins were emphatic enough to show what Cerezo can do when they’re on the front foot. The 3-0 against Kyoto was especially tidy. They didn’t just nick it; they controlled it.
Away from home, though, the picture is more cautious. Their 0-0 at Vissel Kobe was a solid point, but the away defeat at Sanfrecce Hiroshima reminded everyone that they’re not immune when pushed. They also lost away at Nagoya Grampus earlier in April, and that means the road form isn’t something you’d trust blindly. Still, Cerezo have the tools to make life awkward in these games. They’re organised enough to avoid getting run over, and their recent away results suggest they can keep things tight if they start well. The downside? They’ve now gone three matches without a win. That’s not a disaster, but it does take the shine off those earlier victories.
This fixture has leaned Cerezo Osaka’s way more often than not, and the recent meetings have been open enough to keep neutrals interested. Cerezo beat Shimizu 4-2 on 7 March 2026, then repeated the trick with a 4-2 win in June 2025 and a 4-1 away victory in November 2025. That’s a nasty little sequence for Shimizu to have to live with. Three straight wins for Cerezo, all with plenty of goals. Shimizu have had their own moments in this matchup over the years, including a 2-1 home win in December 2021 and a 3-1 victory in November 2020, but the recent trend is the one that matters most here.
It’s also hard to ignore how often both sides have scored when they meet. Seven of the last eight have seen BTTS land, and six of those eight have gone over 2.5 goals. That’s not a fluke. These teams have been much more comfortable trading blows than sitting in a low-block stalemate. You wouldn’t be shocked if that pattern surfaced again.
Double Chance 1X at 4/9 looks the safest call here. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the betting guides hub pulls together all of our core football betting explainers so you can jump straight to the market or strategy you need. Shimizu aren’t in brilliant shape, but they’ve just picked up a confidence-boosting away win and they’re at home, which matters in a match this evenly balanced. Cerezo have been hard to beat recently, yet they’ve only won once in their last three and their last two matches were both draws. That’s enough hesitation to steer this toward the home side avoiding defeat rather than chasing a straight winner.
The head-to-head does lean Cerezo, and that’s the one thing that stops this from being a routine home lean. Still, the broader picture is more balanced than those recent meetings alone suggest. The xG projection is tight at 1.3 to 1.2, and a 1-1 draw fits that nicely. One goal each, no separation. If you want a slightly livelier alternative, Both Teams to Score has obvious appeal given how often that’s landed in this fixture, but 1X is the cleaner play for this one.
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