Amiens SC host Pau FC at the Stade de la Licorne on Friday evening, 10 April 2026, with Ligue 2 points carrying very different weight for the two clubs. Amiens are trying to drag themselves clear of trouble, while Pau arrive with a far more comfortable cushion in mid-table and an outside glance towards the top half. That gap in the standings matters. Amiens are 16th with 24 points and, at this stage of the season, every home game feels like one they can’t really afford to waste. Pau sit 11th on 39 points, and although they’re not in immediate danger, another away result would keep them nicely away from the scrap below.
There’s also a little history here. These two have played out some lively Ligue 2 meetings in recent seasons, and the fixture often throws up goals. Amiens have already beaten Pau twice in the last calendar year, including a 2-1 away win in December, but Pau have hurt them too, and that back-and-forth has kept this matchup from ever feeling one-sided. With Amiens leaking goals at home and Pau carrying a decent away record, this has the look of a game where both sides will back themselves to score. Clean sheets? Don’t bet on many of those.
Amiens SC Form & Analysis
Amiens come into this one without a win in seven league games, and the mood around the club won’t be great. Their most recent outing was a 1-1 draw at Bastia on 3 April, which at least stopped the bleeding after a rough run, but it wasn’t the sort of performance that screams turnaround. They’d already been through a painful stretch before that: a 4-3 home defeat to Le Mans, a 1-0 loss at Guingamp, a 4-2 reverse away to US Boulogne Côte-d'Opale, and a 2-0 home defeat to Troyes. That’s a brutal sequence. Even the two points they’ve picked up in their last six have felt more like survival than momentum.
The trouble is that Amiens are too easy to play against, especially at home. Their home record reads 2 wins, 3 draws and 9 defeats, with 16 goals scored and 26 conceded on their own ground. That’s not the profile of a side you trust to shut a match down. They’ve scored in enough games to keep them alive, but they’re conceding too often and too freely. The 4-3 loss to Le Mans summed it up perfectly: they can create, they can get into games, and they can also let them slip with embarrassing ease. That kind of defensive looseness is why they sit where they do.
There is a flicker of attacking life, though. Amiens have found the net in recent weeks and have shown they can open teams up at home, even if it’s often in a game that becomes a mess. Yoan Koré’s early goal at Bastia and the fact they pushed Le Mans into a shootout of sorts tells you they won’t be totally blank here. But can they control anything? That’s the real question. Their home form says no. Their seven-game winless run says no as well.
Pau FC Form & Analysis
Pau’s latest result was ugly on paper, a 4-0 defeat at Le Mans on 6 April, and it came at a bad time after they’d found a bit of stability. That away loss snapped a small spell that had included a goalless draw at home to Montpellier and a tidy 1-0 win at Clermont Foot. Before that, they’d drawn 2-2 with Bastia and lost 3-0 to Saint-Étienne at home, so their recent form has been a bit of a rollercoaster. They’re not a side that glides through matches. Far from it. Still, they’ve done enough over the season to stay in a decent position, and they’ve generally been better on the road than at home.
That away record matters here. Pau are sixth in the away table with 22 points from 6 wins, 4 draws and 4 defeats, having scored 21 and conceded 24. That’s a proper away profile for Ligue 2 — not flawless, but solid enough to take on vulnerable opponents. They don’t just sit in and hope either. Even in defeat, they tend to make games open, which is why their matches often drift into goal territory. The 4-3 loss at Troyes and the 4-0 collapse at Le Mans are both ugly examples, but they also show a side that rarely goes quietly.
Thierry Debes will know this is a very live chance to exploit Amiens’ fragility. Pau have already shown they can get a result in this fixture, and they’ve scored in enough away games to fancy another go here. Dame Gueye was on target twice at Le Mans before things ran away from them, and that kind of threat is exactly what Amiens have struggled to contain. The flip side? Pau aren’t exactly watertight themselves. They’ve conceded 48 league goals overall, which is a hefty number for a team sitting in mid-table, and away from home they’ve let in 24 in 14 trips. That’s why this doesn’t feel like a cagey away-day grind. It feels open.
Head-to-Head
These meetings have delivered plenty over the past few seasons. Amiens beat Pau 2-1 away in December 2025, added a 4-2 home win in May 2025, and also won 2-0 in Pau back in October 2024. That’s three Amiens wins in the last four, which gives Alain Pochat’s side a clear recent edge in the matchup.
But it hasn’t been all one-way. Pau beat Amiens 3-2 in Amiens in March 2024, and they’ve also had success in earlier Ligue 2 meetings. The pattern is obvious enough: both teams usually get chances, and the goals tend to arrive. Pau have failed to keep a clean sheet in four of the last six head-to-heads, and that fits the wider picture of two sides who don’t exactly thrive in low-scoring control games.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/11 here, and it feels like the cleanest read on the match. Amiens have been involved in a stream of open games for weeks, Pau’s away matches tend to have a bit of chaos about them, and the projected xG line — 1.4 for Amiens, 1.7 for Pau — points towards chances at both ends. That’s enough for a goals bet. It should land.
The scoreline call is 1-2 to Pau. Amiens are struggling to win, struggling to defend, and usually good for at least one goal at home. Pau have the away edge and enough attacking output to hurt them, even if they’re not reliable enough to promise a clean victory. The only real tension is whether Amiens do enough to push it beyond two goals themselves — but given their home record and Pau’s habit of creating a loose, open match, that feels like a fair risk. An alternative angle would be Both Teams to Score, which also has plenty going for it.