Stade Rennais host Paris FC in Ligue 1 on Sunday evening, 10 May 2026, with the season entering its final stretch and both clubs still playing for something meaningful. Rennes are up in 5th and firmly in the European mix, so every point now matters if they want to hold off the pack behind them and keep their grip on a top-five place. Paris FC sit 11th, a little more comfortable but not quite safe enough to coast. A good finish is still there for the taking, and a win in Brittany would sharpen the mood fast.
Franck Haise’s side come into this one with a strong home base and plenty of goals in the tank, while Antoine Kombouare’s men have shown they can punch above their weight against bigger names. Rennes have already beaten Paris FC this season, edging them 1-0 in Paris on 7 November 2025, and that result matters. Not because history dictates anything on its own, but because it told a familiar story: Rennes were organised, patient and just a bit more ruthless when the game opened up.
The trip to Roazhon Park feels like a proper test of Rennes’ credentials. Paris FC are no passengers now. They’ve had their moments all season, and the recent surge in their results suggests they won’t roll over. Still, Rennes have more on the line, more home firepower and a cleaner route to victory. That combination usually matters in May.
Stade Rennais Form & Analysis
Rennes’ recent run has had a bit of everything. They stumbled at Lyon on 3 May, losing 4-2 in a game that turned wild after a bright start and ended with their defence badly exposed. Before that, though, they’d put together a much healthier spell: a 2-1 home win over Nantes on 26 April, a slick 3-0 victory away at Strasbourg on 19 April, another 2-1 success at home against Angers on 11 April, and a breathless 4-3 away win at Brest on 4 April. Go back one more game and you find a goalless draw with Metz on 22 March. That’s four wins in six, and even the defeat at Lyon came after Rennes had repeatedly shown they can score in bunches.
The home numbers are where Haise’s team really stand out. At Roazhon Park, Rennes have taken 31 points from 16 matches, winning nine, drawing four and losing three. They’ve scored 28 and conceded 16 on their own turf, which is a healthy return and one that underlines how hard they are to contain when they’re in rhythm. They’re not just nicking results at home. They tend to play on the front foot, and that’s why they’ve got the sort of record that keeps them in the upper reaches of the table. It’s also why their games often open up. You don’t need to look far to see that.
The shape of their form suggests a side that’ll back itself to outscore opponents rather than suffocate them. The 4-3 at Brest and the 4-2 loss at Lyon were both chaotic, and Rennes were involved in the kind of high-event football that usually suits a team with more attacking belief than defensive certainty. Their overall league record of 56 scored and 46 conceded tells the same story. Good going forward. A bit loose at the back. That won’t scare them, though. Not at home, where they’ve built enough consistency to expect chances and enough confidence to keep pressing after setbacks. Three wins in a row earlier in April? That kind of run changes how a side walks onto the pitch.
Paris FC Form & Analysis
Paris FC arrive with more swagger than their league position might suggest. Their last six have been lively, and the recent results read like a team with plenty of fight. They hammered Stade Brestois 4-0 at home on 3 May, a proper statement after losing 1-0 to Lille at home on 26 April. Before that came a 3-1 away win at Metz on 19 April, a 4-1 home demolition of Monaco on 10 April, a 1-1 draw at Lorient on 5 April and a 3-2 home win over Le Havre on 22 March. That’s a mixed but dangerous run. When Paris FC get it right, they can make a mess of people.
Their away form is respectable rather than spectacular. In the league on the road, they’ve picked up 19 points from 16 away matches, with four wins, seven draws and five defeats. They’ve scored 18 and conceded 21 away from home, which tells you two things at once: they’re usually competitive, but they don’t travel with the same bite they show at home. They’ve managed to stay relatively hard to beat, yet they don’t often control games away from their own ground. Can they do that in Rennes? That’s the question.
Kombouare’s side do have a threat in transition. The 3-1 win at Metz and the 4-0 rout of Brest both came with conviction, and the 4-1 win over Monaco was the kind of result that catches attention. Still, there’s a clear pattern beneath the noise. Paris FC are more comfortable when the game gets open and they can break forward with purpose. If Rennes score first, the visitors will be forced into a chase they don’t always handle cleanly. That’s where their away record starts to matter. It’s solid enough to keep them in matches, but not strong enough to make them favourites in a ground like this.
The defensive side is the worry. Paris FC have conceded 47 league goals overall, almost one a game, and even in their better away outings they’ve usually given opponents something to work with. That’s fine if the attack is firing. When it isn’t, the whole thing looks flimsy. They’ve got enough momentum to make this uncomfortable for Rennes. They haven’t got enough consistency to make the home side fear them.
Head-to-Head
The recent head-to-head record leans Rennes’ way, and fairly comfortably. The teams met in Paris on 7 November 2025, with Stade Rennais winning 1-0. It was tight, but that result extended a useful trend for Rennes in this fixture and gave them another reminder that they know how to manage Paris FC when it counts.
Go a little further back and the pattern is even clearer, though the sample is tiny and old. Rennes won 1-0 at home in October 1973 and 2-1 at home in August 1972, while there was a 2-2 draw in Paris in January 1973 and a 0-0 draw in March 1974. It’s hardly a modern dossier to build a thesis on, but the more recent meeting does matter. Rennes have had Paris FC’s number lately. That’s enough to lean on here.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Stade Rennais to win this one at 1/2. For more context beyond this pick, see our accumulator betting guide, which breaks down accumulator betting including how to build combos without padding the slip. It’s short, no question, but it’s still the right angle. Rennes are fifth, they’re stronger at home than Paris FC are on the road, and they’ve already shown this season that they can handle this opponent without getting dragged into chaos. The 1-0 win in Paris was tidy enough, and with Rennes’ home record reading nine wins from 16 and 28 goals scored, they should have enough to do the job again.
The 2-1 scoreline feels about right. Paris FC have enough attacking threat to make things awkward — they’ve scored four against Monaco and four against Brest in recent weeks, after all — so this doesn’t scream clean sheet. But Rennes tend to find a way at Roazhon Park, and the extra urgency of chasing European qualification should sharpen them up. A home win and both teams to score is the alternative angle if you want a bit more value, but the straight Rennes win is the call.