Avispa Fukuoka host V-Varen Nagasaki at the stadium in J1 League, West action on Saturday morning, 11 April 2026, with both sides still trying to find some proper rhythm early in the season. There’s no trophy on the line here, but the points matter just the same. Avispa need to steady themselves after a choppy start, while Nagasaki arrive with enough confidence to believe they can nick another tight result.
The broader context is simple enough. Avispa have already been dragged through a few different moods in recent weeks — a heavy home defeat, a pair of draws, then a morale-lifting away win — and Shinya Tsukahara will want this to be the moment his side start looking more solid. Nagasaki, coached by Takuya Takagi, have been living on fine margins too. Their results have swung back and forth, but they’ve shown they can win away from home and they’ve already beaten Avispa once this month. That alone gives this trip some bite.
The previous meeting, on 15 March, was settled by a single goal. That was the sort of game both managers would probably accept again if they had the choice, although neither side will want to leave much to chance this time. Tight, tense and a bit nervy? Very possible.
Avispa Fukuoka Form & Analysis
Avispa’s last month has been a proper mix of frustration and relief. They were swept aside 5-1 at home by Nagoya Grampus on 7 March, a result that exposed every weakness in one ugly afternoon. They followed that with a 2-1 away defeat to Vissel Kobe, then fell 1-0 at V-Varen Nagasaki on 15 March. That was three straight losses and, for a while, it looked like the season might drift away from them before it had really started. But they’ve at least stopped the slide.
A 1-1 draw at home to Shimizu S-Pulse steadied things, and another home draw, 2-2 with Gamba Osaka, suggested a side that can still compete even if they’re not controlling matches. The best sign came on 5 April, when they went to Sanfrecce Hiroshima and came away with a 1-0 win. That was a proper away response. Not flashy, but clean and effective. Yu Hashimoto’s early goal was enough, and they did enough without having to dominate the whole game. That kind of result can change the mood around a squad fast.
Still, there are obvious concerns. Avispa have only scored six goals in their last six matches, and that’s not the sort of output that inspires confidence before a derby-style league meeting. They’ve also had their defensive moments. The 5-1 loss to Nagoya stands out, of course, but even in the recent wins and draws they’ve given opponents chances. Their latest outing at Sanfrecce is a good example: they won, yet their xGA of 2.05 tells you they spent plenty of the afternoon under pressure. That’s fine if you’re efficient. It’s not fine if you’re chasing a match.
The home picture is also hard to read because there isn’t a clean season-long split available, but what’s already clear is that Avispa haven’t been locking games down at their own ground. They drew with Shimizu, drew with Gamba, and were hammered by Nagoya. Three home fixtures. Zero wins. That won’t comfort Tsukahara. You’d expect a home side to be firmer than that.
V-Varen Nagasaki Form & Analysis
Nagasaki’s recent run is just as jagged, though in a different way. They opened this stretch with a 1-0 home win over Cerezo Osaka on 28 February, then lost 3-2 at Gamba Osaka after a game that had more chaos than control. That was followed by another home defeat, 2-1 to Kyoto Sanga FC, before they earned a tidy 1-0 away win at Fagiano Okayama on 21 March. Then came the reverse fixture with Avispa, and Nagasaki handled it well enough to win 1-0 at home on 15 March. On 5 April, though, they were beaten 3-0 by Shimizu S-Pulse in a result that felt more alarming than the scoreline alone suggests.
That last defeat was a poor one. Nagasaki barely got going, managing only 0.53 xG, and they were outgunned in the key moments. Shimizu forced the issue, found an early breakthrough, and Nagasaki never really recovered. Three goals down at home is a nasty look. It doesn’t wipe out the good work from the win at Okayama, but it does blunt it sharply.
Away from home, though, Nagasaki have shown they can be awkward. Their trip to Okayama ended in a 1-0 win, and earlier they pushed Gamba Osaka into a high-scoring contest before losing 3-2. That’s not the profile of a side that folds on the road. They travel with a bit of belief, and that matters here because they’ve already done the job against Avispa once this season. Takuya Takagi will know his team don’t need to dominate possession to hurt this opponent. They just need to be organised and take the one good chance that appears.
There is, though, a slight tension in Nagasaki’s profile. They’ve scored in four of their last six, but they’ve also been shut out once and held to one goal in several others. The attack isn’t explosive. The defense can be handy when they’re set, yet the 3-0 loss to Shimizu reminds you they’re not bulletproof either. In a match like this, where margins tend to be tiny, that’s enough to make them dangerous but not exactly dependable.
Head-to-Head
These two don’t need much time to find the edge between them. Nagasaki beat Avispa 1-0 on 15 March, and that’s the most relevant meeting by a mile because it came so recently. Before that, though, the broader pattern was a bit more mixed, with Avispa winning 2-0 in the Emperor Cup in 2022 and a 3-1 league win at Nagasaki back in 2020. There’s been a fair share of one-goal games in this rivalry too, including Nagasaki’s 1-0 wins in 2019 and 2017.
If anything, the head-to-head history leans toward tight matches rather than wild scorelines. Six of the last eight meetings have gone under 2.5 goals. That fits the shape of this fixture nicely. It won’t take much for this to become another low-scoring scrap.
We Predict: BTTS - No
We’re backing BTTS - No at 4/5 for this clash. The price is fair enough, and the logic is pretty straightforward: both teams have shown enough attacking hesitation to make a clean-sheet angle more appealing than an open-game one. Avispa have managed only six goals across their last six, while Nagasaki were shut out in a heavy 3-0 defeat to Shimizu on 5 April and have looked more functional than fluent on the road.
The recent head-to-head also points in the same direction. The most recent meeting finished 1-0 to Nagasaki, and that kind of scoreline feels live again. A 0-1 away win for the visitors is the correct-score shout here, with Avispa’s home inconsistency and Nagasaki’s ability to grind out narrow road results doing the heavy lifting. If you want a slightly safer route, under 2.5 goals is worth a look too. This doesn’t look like a game that’s going to burst open.