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Standard Liège host Oud-Heverlee Leuven on Friday evening, 8 May 2026, in the Pro League’s Conference League Playoffs, and this one feels very much like a game that can sharpen the picture at the top of the group. Standard are trying to keep their momentum rolling after a huge away win at Royal Antwerp, while Leuven arrive knowing the pressure is building fast. They’re six matches without a victory and, at this stage, every slip makes the climb back into contention steeper.
There’s also a bit of history between these two in this playoff run already. Standard won 3-1 at Leuven on 4 April, and both sides have already lived through the kind of chaotic, open games that can define this mini-league. For Standard, the aim is simple: stay on the front foot and push towards the European places. For Leuven, it’s more basic than that. They need a result, badly. Another defeat would leave their hopes looking thin.
Standard’s recent form has been a bit all over the place, but the most recent performance was a proper statement. Their 5-0 win away at Royal Antwerp on 3 May was ruthless, clinical and far more convincing than the scoreline alone suggests. They were already in control before half-time, then simply kept pouring forward. Timothee Nkada scored, David Robert Bates added another, and Rafiki Saïd ran the game with a brace after the break. That’s the sort of outing that changes the mood in a dressing room. It changes the room around it too.
Before that, Vincent Euvrard’s side had been uneven. They drew 1-1 at KRC Genk, lost 2-1 at home to Royal Antwerp, beat Sporting Charleroi 2-1 away and fell 2-1 at home to Westerlo. Then came the 3-1 win in Leuven earlier this month, which feels important now. So, four wins, one draw and one defeat across the last six tells a story of a side that’s dangerous going forward but not entirely reliable when asked to control a game. They do concede chances. They do give the opposition a route in. Still, when Standard get the tempo right, they can be a handful.
The home picture is less complete because there’s no season-long split available, but the patterns are clear enough from the recent run. Standard have scored in five of their last six, and they’ve been involved in plenty of high-scoring matches. Five of those six have gone over 2.5 goals, and they’ve both scored in five of the six as well. That’s not a coincidence. Their matches tend to open up, and when they step onto the front foot, they leave space behind. The red card for Boubakar Kouyaté late on at Antwerp won’t matter much here in isolation, but it’s part of the broader picture: this isn’t a side built to shut games down and squeeze blood from a stone.
That said, Standard will fancy themselves to carry the threat again. Their attacking patterns looked sharp at Antwerp, and if they get anything like that level of movement and directness at home, Leuven will struggle to keep it clean. The question isn’t really whether Standard can create chances. They can. It’s whether they can stop giving them away at the other end. That’s been the nagging issue.
Leuven’s run is a mess, and there’s no dressing it up. They’re winless in six, and the last four have brought a draw, three defeats and a fair bit of frustration. The one point came in a breathless 3-3 away at Westerlo on 2 May, a game that had more than enough attacking action but also showed the same old problem: they can score, but they can’t seem to control games or protect a lead when it matters. Abdoul Karim Traoré, Wouter George, Kyan Vaesen, Allahyar Sayyad and Isa Sakamoto all got involved in the scoring story, and that only makes the point sharper. Even when Leuven do enough going forward, they still end up chasing the match.
Before that draw, Felice Mazzu’s side lost 2-0 at home to Charleroi and 2-0 at home to Westerlo, and those back-to-back blanks will worry them more than anything. They also lost 2-0 at Antwerp, and if you stretch slightly further back, they drew 0-0 away at Genk before losing 3-1 at home to Standard. There’s a pattern there. The defence is getting nicked too easily, and the attack hasn’t been consistent enough to compensate. Six games without a win is one thing. Doing it while scoring only sporadically is another.
The away angle is a bit awkward because the full season split isn’t available, but the recent road results tell you enough. Leuven drew 3-3 at Westerlo, but they also lost at Antwerp and drew blank at Genk. That’s not a convincing away platform. They’ve also gone four games without a clean sheet, and that matters here because Standard are exactly the kind of opponent who’ll punish any hesitation. Leuven’s overall issue is straightforward: they don’t look solid enough at the back to trust, and they’re not taking enough of the chances they do create.
Can they nick something in Liège? Sure. They scored three at Westerlo, and they’ve shown in flashes that they can break through. But they rarely build on it. The confidence seems fragile, and once the game starts to tilt against them, they don’t have a proven way back. They need a fast start or they’ll spend the night under pressure.
Standard’s 3-1 win at Leuven on 4 April is the cleanest recent reference point, and it fits the wider pattern well enough. These meetings have been lively more often than not, with both sides finding ways to hurt the other. Standard also lost 1-0 at home to Leuven in December and 1-0 away in August 2025, so there’s no sense of complete dominance either way. That said, the more recent meeting felt like a shift back towards Standard’s attacking edge.
The bigger theme is that these games tend to produce chances and goals, even when the scoreline itself doesn’t get out of hand. Standard’s own recent home-and-away profile lines up with that, and Leuven’s defensive record isn’t sturdy enough to suggest a cagey afternoon. These two know each other well by now. That usually means one thing. Openings.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/11 here, and it’s the sharpest angle on the board. If you want more detail on trixie bets, our trixie bet guide breaks down trixie bets if you are looking at multi-bet structures rather than singles. Standard have scored in five of their last six and have been involved in a stream of open games, while Leuven have found the net in enough of their recent outings to threaten, even when the results haven’t gone their way. Put simply, both back lines look vulnerable. Neither side gives the impression of keeping a clean sheet on demand.
The 1-2 correct score has plenty of appeal too. Standard’s momentum from that 5-0 win at Antwerp matters, but Leuven’s 3-3 draw at Westerlo suggests they’re capable of getting on the scoresheet even when the match turns messy. This should be competitive rather than tidy. Standard have the stronger form and the clearer attacking rhythm, so they get the nod — but Leuven should still do enough to make BTTS land. An over 2.5 goals angle isn’t a bad alternative either, though BTTS feels the cleaner play.
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