Sint-Truidense VV host KAA Gent on Saturday evening in the Pro League Championship Round, with the race for the upper places still carrying proper weight even at this stage of the season. Sint-Truiden sit 3rd on 39 points and have done most of their best work at home, while Gent are 5th on 27 and need a response after a messy run that has left their campaign feeling unfinished. This isn’t just about pride. Both sides still want to finish the round in decent shape, and for Gent, any lingering hope of climbing the table depends on finally turning performances into results.
There’s also a familiar edge to this one. These teams met on 19 April and finished 0-0 in Ghent, a tight, stop-start game that never really caught fire. But the broader pattern across this fixture leans more towards STVV on home turf. They’ve taken points off Gent before, and the visitors arrive with a seven-match winless run that’s starting to weigh heavily. That’s the headline. Gent are not broken, but they’re clearly stuck. Sint-Truiden, by contrast, know exactly who they are at home.
Sint-Truidense VV Form & Analysis
Sint-Truiden’s recent story has been one of strong home response and one rough away outing. They beat Anderlecht 2-0 at home on 23 April, a result that gave real shape to their Championship Round push, then followed it by going to Mechelen and winning 4-1 on 26 April. That was an eye-catching away performance and it showed what they can do when they get on top early. Their latest home game was another positive one, a 2-1 victory over Union Saint-Gilloise on 2 May, before the run was checked at Club Brugge on 9 May in a 2-0 defeat. That last one was a different sort of evening entirely. Club Brugge had them under pressure, Sint-Truiden barely got going, and Ryan Merlen’s red card only made things harder.
That Brugge defeat shouldn’t be overplayed, though. It was an ugly match for STVV, not a trend. Before that, they had won three of four and had looked sharp enough in the final third to keep asking questions. Their home form tells a stronger story still: 12 wins, one draw and five defeats at their ground, with 28 goals scored and 22 conceded. That’s the record of a side that usually expects to control things in front of their own crowd. They’re not cagey at home. They play with intent, and they’ve been rewarded for it.
There’s a useful balance to Sint-Truiden too. They’ve scored 56 league goals overall and conceded 42, which is a healthy enough profile for a side in the upper part of the table. At home, they’ve been compact enough without becoming dull. The numbers at their ground suggest a team that can find openings, but isn’t immune to conceding either. That matters here because Gent won’t need many invitations. Sint-Truiden will fancy their chances of scoring again. They’ll also know they can’t switch off for a second.
KAA Gent Form & Analysis
Gent’s form is the kind that drains confidence. The most recent outing was a 1-1 draw at home to Anderlecht on 10 May, and while that at least stopped the bleeding, it wasn’t the sort of result that changes the mood. They were good enough in spells, with a strong expected-goals figure of 1.97 and 15 shots, but they still couldn’t turn pressure into victory. Even then, a red card for Mihajlo Cvetković late in the first half made life awkward. That’s been the tone of their campaign recently: moments of promise, then something gets in the way.
Before that, Gent lost 1-0 away to Mechelen on 3 May, were beaten 2-0 at home by Club Brugge on 26 April, and drew 0-0 away to Union Saint-Gilloise on 22 April. They also drew 0-0 with Sint-Truiden on 19 April. Go back a little further and the picture hardly improves — they lost 3-1 at Anderlecht on 12 April. Seven matches without a win is a long stretch for a club of this size. Seven. That’s not a blip any more. It’s a run.
The away record explains a lot. Gent have taken only 20 points on the road, with five wins, five draws and eight defeats, and they’ve scored 23 away goals while conceding 30. That’s not terrible, but it’s not good enough for a side trying to stay relevant in the top end of the table. They’ve had enough chances away from home to compete, yet the clean-sheet issue keeps hanging around. Gent have generally been competitive, but they rarely make life easy for themselves. The result is a team that can stay in games without quite taking them over.
Still, there are reasons Sint-Truiden won’t want to be complacent. Gent’s away numbers aren’t disastrous, and they’ve been around enough strong opponents to stay familiar with the pace of these Championship Round matches. Their draw at Union showed they can keep a lid on dangerous opposition, and the 1-1 against Anderlecht at home at least hinted at some attacking life. But that seven-game winless run is impossible to ignore. They need a breakthrough. At the moment, it’s not arriving.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings have been competitive rather than wild, and that matters here. The most recent clash, on 19 April, ended 0-0 at Gent, which fits the sense that this fixture can become controlled and cautious when neither side gets an early grip. But Sint-Truiden have had the better of the more recent home meetings. They beat Gent 3-1 on 27 July 2025 and won 2-1 away in November of the same year, while Gent’s best results in the broader run have come when they’ve kept things tight, as in the 1-0 and 2-0 wins in 2024.
There’s a pattern worth keeping in mind. Sint-Truiden have avoided defeat in three straight meetings, and while this isn’t a derby built on raw hostility, it does suggest they know how to live with Gent’s game. That said, the wider H2H picture also contains a fair share of low-scoring matches. The 0-0 in April wasn’t a one-off. If this one starts slowly, it may never really break open.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 for this one. The price is short enough to tell you the market expects goals at both ends, and that feels fair. Sint-Truiden have scored 56 league goals overall and are solid at home, while Gent’s away record is good enough to believe they’ll create something even if they don’t control the game. A 2-1 Sint-Truiden win is the likeliest scoreline. That fits the shape of the fixture better than a clean, one-sided home success.
The key point is that neither defence has been watertight for long. Sint-Truiden have conceded 22 at home, Gent have shipped 30 away, and the visitors come in without a win in seven. That usually pushes a team into chasing mode sooner or later. The only real concern for BTTS backers is that the April meeting ended 0-0 and Gent have had a few flat attacking nights. Still, the balance of recent form says both teams should get chances. A home win with both teams scoring is the angle I’d trust most.