AZ Alkmaar welcome SC Heerenveen to the AFAS Stadion on Sunday evening in the VriendenLoterij Eredivisie, and both clubs arrive with a realistic eye on Europe. AZ are sixth with 45 points, Heerenveen sit eighth on 44, so this is one of those spring fixtures that can shift the whole mood of a run-in. Win here and you give yourself a proper platform. Slip up and the pack behind starts breathing down your neck.
For AZ, there’s a quick turnaround from Thursday night’s 3-0 defeat away to Shakhtar Donetsk in the UEFA Conference League knockout phase, which ended their latest European surge on a sour note. Before that they’d put together some serious highs, including a 4-0 away demolition of Sparta Praha and a 4-0 home league win over Heracles Almelo. Heerenveen, meanwhile, come in on the back of a lively 4-1 home win over Heracles and a five-game unbeaten stretch in the league before that European-style momentum, chasing the kind of late-season push that can turn mid-table into something more meaningful.
The stakes are obvious enough. AZ want to stay in touch with the European places and protect a strong home position. Heerenveen are only a point behind and know a result in Alkmaar would drag them right into the conversation. This isn’t a dead rubber. Not even close.
AZ Alkmaar Form & Analysis
AZ’s last six have been a proper rollercoaster, which feels about right for a side juggling domestic ambition with continental football. They opened this stretch with a 2-1 loss at PSV Eindhoven, then bounced back in emphatic fashion by beating Sparta Praha 2-1 at home. That was followed by a 4-0 thumping of Heracles in Alkmaar, the sort of afternoon that reminds everyone how dangerous they can be when they get on the front foot. Then came a superb 4-0 win away at Sparta Praha, a result that screamed confidence and control. But the feel-good mood didn’t last. They lost 3-0 away to Groningen in the league, and then 3-0 again at Shakhtar on Thursday. Two heavy defeats, two clean sheets lost, and the rhythm has been interrupted.
That’s the story with AZ right now: when they’re flowing, they can blow teams away. When they’re off it, the whole operation can look a bit fragile. Their home record is still strong, though, and that matters here. They’ve taken 26 points from their league matches at the AFAS Stadion, with seven wins, five draws and only two defeats. They’ve scored 31 and conceded 21 at home, which is a healthy enough return and tells you they usually play on the front foot. They don’t sit back much, and they don’t need to. That’s part of the attraction.
The problem is that their recent defensive work has wobbled just as the attack has gone through a dry patch in the wrong matches. Shakhtar kept them to very little, and Groningen did the same in the league. Mind you, AZ are still the sort of side that can respond quickly, especially on home turf. Leeroy Echteld will want a sharp reaction, not another flat performance. One more subdued outing and the mood around them changes fast.
SC Heerenveen Form & Analysis
Heerenveen arrive with better recent league momentum than AZ, and they’ve done it by playing with a bit of edge. Their last six started with a 3-1 loss away to PSV, which wasn’t a disaster in itself, but they then picked up and started punching back. A 2-1 win at Excelsior followed, then another 2-1 home win over Sparta Rotterdam. They beat Telstar 3-0, shared a lively 2-2 draw at NEC Nijmegen, and then returned to form in style with that 4-1 win over Heracles on 5 April. It’s been a productive spell. They’ve scored in bunches, and they’ve generally carried enough threat to keep games open.
That’s the key point with Robin Veldman’s side. They’re not just hanging around in matches; they’re making them messy. Heerenveen have 53 goals in the league this season, more than AZ, and their away record is respectable too. Five wins, three draws and six defeats from 14 trips isn’t elite, but it’s solid enough, especially when you add the 22 goals they’ve scored on the road. They’ve also conceded 24 away, which tells you they’re rarely shutting teams down for long. You don’t get the sense they’re built for cagey away afternoons. Far from it.
Their recent attacking output has been hard to ignore. Against Heracles they carved out chance after chance, with 24 shots and 14 on target in a dominant display. That sort of volume away from home is usually enough to bother anyone, and it’s part of why Heerenveen’s matches have been so open. They’re unbeaten in five league games since that PSV defeat, and that run has been built on goals at both ends. They’ll fancy their chances of landing another punch in Alkmaar. The trick is whether they can absorb the pressure when AZ start moving the ball at pace.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been wildly open in recent seasons, and the numbers are hard to ignore. The last meeting ended with Heerenveen winning 3-1 at home on 23 November 2025. Before that, AZ beat them 4-1 in Alkmaar in May 2025, while Heerenveen had also won 3-1 at home in March 2025. Go back a little further and you find AZ’s extraordinary 9-1 home win in September 2024, a result that still hangs over the matchup like a warning sign. These two know how to make a mess of each other.
The real pattern is simple: goals, and plenty of them. Recent meetings have rarely been tight, and both sides have usually found a way through. AZ haven’t kept a clean sheet against Heerenveen in a long while, and Heerenveen haven’t managed one against AZ either. That won’t fill either defence with comfort. It should help the scorers more than the stoppers.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We are backing Over 2.5 Goals at 2/5 for this one. It’s short, yes, but the price fits the fixture. AZ’s home games have been open enough, Heerenveen’s away trips usually are, and the head-to-head record has been a gift to goal bettors. Six straight meetings have gone over 2.5. That’s not a fluke. That’s a pattern.
The likely script is fairly easy to see. AZ should have enough quality and home control to score at least once, maybe twice, but Heerenveen have the attacking numbers and recent confidence to land a reply of their own. A 2-1 AZ win feels about right, with both teams getting chances and neither defence looking fully comfortable. If you wanted a slightly fatter alternative, Both Teams to Score would make sense too, but the cleaner play is the goals market. This one shouldn’t stay quiet for long.