Silkeborg IF and Randers FC meet at Silkeborg on Sunday 26 April 2026 in the Danish Superliga relegation round, and both sides know exactly what this kind of game does to a season. It doesn’t just shape the table; it shapes the mood around the club. For Silkeborg, there’s a chance to keep building momentum and stretch an unbeaten run that has quietly turned into something useful. For Randers, the pressure is heavier. They’re five league matches without a win and still trying to find some traction in a group where every dropped point feels expensive.
This is also a fixture that has already produced some clear patterns. The teams met at Randers on 22 March, when Silkeborg walked away with a 3-0 win. Before that, though, there was a goalless draw in Silkeborg back in November, and the broader head-to-head has been fairly mixed, with a few tight contests and a couple of away wins. So while the recent meeting gives Silkeborg confidence, it doesn’t tell the whole story. Randers have enough in them to make this awkward. They just haven’t been doing it consistently enough.
The market here reflects that tension. Both Teams To Score at 4/7 is the main angle, and it’s easy to see why. Silkeborg are creating chances, Randers are still finding the net, and neither defence has looked airtight for long stretches. That points towards a game with goals at both ends rather than a neat, controlled affair.
Silkeborg IF Form & Analysis
Silkeborg’s last few games have had a slightly chaotic edge to them, but the overall tone is positive. They went to Vejle on 22 April and came away with a 2-1 win, and that matters because it followed a home draw with FC Fredericia and a home win over Odense Boldklub. Before that, there was the ugly 7-0 hammering away to FC København — the sort of result that can flatten a team for a while — but Silkeborg have responded properly since then. A 3-0 away win at Randers on 22 March also sits nicely in the memory. That was a statement result. The kind you keep coming back to.
The numbers from the Vejle win tell a slightly more complicated story than the scoreline. Silkeborg were outshot 15-10 and only narrowly edged the big chances count, but they were ruthless when it mattered. Callum McCowatt broke through on 70 minutes, Wahid Faghir doubled the lead three minutes later, and Tonni Adamsen sealed it from the spot in stoppage time. It wasn’t smooth, and they were left with a late red card for Lasse Nielsen, but they got the job done. That’s the key point. They’ve now gone three league matches unbeaten, and the attack has kept them afloat despite one catastrophic night in Copenhagen.
At home, Silkeborg’s season has had enough fluency to suggest they can carry the game to opponents. The recent home draw with Fredericia was open and messy, and the 3-1 win over Odense showed they can stretch teams when they get a foothold. They’ve also got a habit of producing matches with goals in them — Silkeborg have gone over 2.5 goals in five straight, which fits the eye test too. That doesn’t mean they’re perfect at the back. Far from it. They’ve kept conceding, and the clean-sheet record isn’t convincing. Still, they’re usually good for chances, and at home they rarely play like a side content to sit and wait.
Kent Nielsen’s side look best when they can keep the tempo up and force the game into repeated transitions. That’s where Silkeborg become dangerous. They’re not built for sterile control. They want movement, pressing, and a bit of disorder. That can leave them exposed, of course, but against a Randers side that’s also carrying defensive baggage, it feels like a risk worth taking.
Randers FC Form & Analysis
Randers arrive with a very different mood around them. Their last six league matches read like a side searching for a spark and not quite finding one. A 2-2 home draw with FC Fredericia on 23 April followed a 3-1 away defeat to Odense Boldklub, which in turn came after a home loss to FC København. Before that was another draw at Vejle, and before that, the 3-0 home defeat to Silkeborg. The one bright spot in this six-game spell is buried all the way back on 13 March, when they beat Fredericia 3-0 away. Since then, it’s been five league matches without a win. That’s a long enough stretch to drag belief down.
Their draw with Fredericia in midweek was a strange one. Randers actually looked lively enough going forward, scoring twice inside half an hour through Sofus Johannesen and John Björkengren, only to be undone by an own goal and then a leveller straight after the break. Their xG of 1.65 was respectable, and the shot profile wasn’t bad either, with 10 attempts and four big chances created. But the problem keeps showing up at the other end. They’re not protecting leads, and they’re not shutting games down once the first wave of pressure passes. That’s a dangerous habit in any relegation-round fixture.
Away from home, Randers have had flashes, but the overall pattern is still unstable. The 3-1 loss at Odense followed a 1-1 draw at Vejle, and that’s the story in miniature: competitive enough to hang around, not clean enough to finish the job. They can score on the road, and that matters here, but they’ve also gone five matches without a clean sheet. That’s the real issue. When a team can’t close games out and can’t stop conceding, it becomes hard to trust them for a full 90 minutes.
Rasmus Bertelsen’s side need something sharper from their defensive structure, because the goals they’re allowing are rarely one-off events. Randers are getting involved in lively matches, but they’re not controlling enough of them. They’ve scored in four of their last five, and that keeps the BTTS case alive, yet their away form doesn’t suggest a side ready to clamp down on a game when it gets away from them. Can they keep Silkeborg quiet? At this point, that feels unlikely.
Head-to-Head
Silkeborg’s 3-0 win at Randers on 22 March is the freshest point of reference, and it was a proper away performance. Efficient, direct, and ruthless. That result also extended a recent sequence of mixed meetings that has swung back and forth without settling into one dominant pattern. There was a 0-0 draw in Silkeborg in November, Randers won 1-0 at home in August, and Silkeborg had earlier taken a 3-1 away win in June 2025. Go back a bit further and you find more narrow margins and a couple of away successes for Silkeborg.
One angle does stand out, though: this matchup has often been tighter than people expect. Six of the last eight head-to-heads have finished under 2.5 goals, even if the most recent one broke that run. That’s worth keeping in mind, especially with both teams now carrying a bit of fatigue and pressure. Still, the current form of both sides nudges the game away from a cagey repeat of the November stalemate.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 here. It’s short enough to be sensible, and the case is pretty straightforward. Silkeborg have scored in four of their last five league games and keep finding ways to create chances, while Randers have scored in four of their last five as well, even if they haven’t been winning enough of those matches. Neither defence has been watertight. Silkeborg have been conceding regularly, and Randers are now five league games without a clean sheet.
That makes 1-1 the obvious correct score call. It fits the recent pattern, the current mood, and the xG projection of 1.3 to Silkeborg and 1.4 to Randers. A 2-1 either way wouldn’t shock anyone, but 1-1 feels the neatest read. If you want a slightly bolder alternative, over 2.5 goals is live too, though the head-to-head history stops it from being the cleaner option than BTTS.