Auxerre host Nantes on Saturday evening in a match that feels far bigger than a routine Ligue 1 fixture between 16th and 17th. This is survival football now. Auxerre come into the weekend on 23 points from 28 matches, Nantes sit below them on 18, and the gap matters. A home win would give Christophe Pélissier’s side real breathing space over one of the teams directly beneath them. Drop points, and the nerves return fast.
For Nantes, the equation is even starker. Vahid Halilhodžić’s team have won only four league games all season and arrive in Burgundy knowing they can’t keep drifting. Five points to make up is manageable in April. Eight would look ugly. That’s why this one carries a proper six-pointer feel, even if neither side has shown enough quality lately to make anyone feel comfortable about taking control of their own fate.
There’s another layer to it as well. Neither club is in the kind of form that lets them play with freedom, so the match should be tense, scrappy and heavy with consequence. Auxerre have at least steadied themselves a touch over the last two rounds. Nantes haven’t won in four. In a relegation fight, that difference matters.
Auxerre Form & Analysis
Auxerre’s recent run has been mixed, but there are signs of life. Their latest result, a 1-1 draw away at Le Havre on 5 April, was probably more encouraging than the scoreline first suggests. They took the lead through Lassine Sinayoko after 15 minutes, created the better chances overall and posted stronger underlying numbers than their hosts. They didn’t hold on, which is the obvious frustration, yet it wasn’t the display of a side completely sinking. Far from it.
Go back a little further and the picture sharpens. Before that, Auxerre brushed aside Brest 3-0 at home on 21 March, one of their cleanest and most convincing wins of the season. That followed a narrow 1-0 defeat away to Marseille, which is no disgrace, and a 0-0 draw at home to Strasbourg in a game where they again struggled to find the finishing touch. Before that came a chaotic 2-2 draw at Lorient and a bruising 3-0 home loss to Rennes. So what are they right now? Competitive, mostly. Ruthless, not really.
That’s the story of their season. Auxerre have scored only 23 goals in 28 league matches, so nobody should pretend they’re suddenly an expansive side. Still, they’ve looked more organised than Nantes and a bit harder to beat in recent weeks, with just one defeat in their last four. At home their record reads four wins, three draws and seven losses, with 13 scored and 15 conceded. Those aren’t sparkling numbers, but they do suggest restraint. Games at their ground tend not to run away from them.
You can see the pattern pretty clearly. Auxerre don’t score enough to dominate many opponents, but they’re often in matches. Their xG against Le Havre was healthy at 1.80, which hints they can produce chances against teams around them. The problem is that they rarely turn one decent spell into two or three goals. That’s why so many of their games stay tight. If they get ahead, they don’t always finish the job. If they fall behind, there isn’t much firepower to flip the script. It keeps dragging them into low-margin contests.
Nantes Form & Analysis
Nantes look like a team clinging on. Their most recent outing, a 0-0 draw away at Metz, earned a point but exposed some ugly weaknesses. They created very little, managed just six shots, and were second best for long stretches. The goalless finish flattered them. They were also reduced to ten men after Tylel Tati’s red card on 39 minutes, then had a goal ruled out by VAR deep into stoppage time. There was drama, yes. There wasn’t much quality.
And that result did little to hide the broader slide. Nantes lost 3-2 at home to Strasbourg on 22 March in a match that underlined their defensive fragility. Before that they were beaten 1-0 by Angers at home and 1-0 away at Lille, either side of a 2-0 win over Le Havre that now looks like an isolated bright spot rather than a turning point. Prior to that came a 3-1 defeat at Monaco. Put simply, it’s one win in six, and even that period feels kinder than their football has.
The table backs it up. Nantes have 24 goals scored and 45 conceded across 27 matches, which tells you almost everything you need to know. They aren’t toothless, but they give away too much, too often. Away from home they’ve taken 10 points from 13 matches, with two wins, four draws and seven defeats, scoring 10 and conceding 19. That away ranking of 14th is a little less disastrous than their overall position, though it still doesn’t scream reliability.
Can they make this awkward for Auxerre? Of course. Relegation battles rarely follow elegant scripts. But Nantes arrive winless in four and have gone under 2.5 goals in four of their last five league matches, which fits the eye test: this is a side lacking fluency and confidence. They can stay in games. They don’t control them. If you’re expecting a bold, front-foot Nantes performance, you’re probably expecting too much.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings between these sides lean Nantes, though not by much. Nantes won the reverse fixture 1-0 on 30 August, and they’re unbeaten in the last three meetings overall, with a 1-1 draw at Auxerre in May 2025 and a 2-0 home win in August 2024. That’s hardly dominance, but it does suggest Auxerre haven’t found this opponent easy to put away.
There’s also a clear low-scoring trend in this fixture. Four of the last five meetings have produced fewer than three goals, which fits what both teams are right now — cautious, limited, and under pressure.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X & Under 3.5
Double Chance 1X & Under 3.5 at 1.57 looks the smart play here. Auxerre are the steadier side, they’re at home, and Nantes simply aren’t doing enough in attack to trust for an away win. Add in the fact that both teams spend so much of their time in tight, low-output games, and the combined angle is a good fit.
The projected numbers point the same way, with Auxerre at 1.15 xG and Nantes at 0.80, which doesn’t exactly scream chaos. You can absolutely see a draw here — 1-1 is the standout scoreline — but it’s hard to build a serious case for Nantes winning a high-scoring match. Auxerre’s own lack of cutting edge keeps the under 3.5 side attractive as well. Even if the game opens up late, four goals still feels a stretch.
If you want a side angle, under 2.5 goals also deserves a look. Mind you, the safer route is to keep Auxerre onside and trust the game to stay cagey. That feels far more in tune with what these two have been serving up.