Clermont Foot host Nancy on Friday evening in Ligue 2, with both clubs stuck in the lower half and still trying to put a bit of daylight between themselves and the danger zone. It’s a meeting between 14th and 15th, separated by nothing at all on 29 points, and that alone tells you how finely balanced this one is. Neither side has had the sort of season that invites comfort. Both have spent too much time grinding for scraps.
There’s a bit more riding on it than just pride, too. Clermont’s home form has kept them afloat without ever really giving them lift, while Nancy arrive with the poorest away return of the two and a seven-game wait for a league win hanging over them. That’s a bleak run for Pablo Correa’s team. Grégory Proment’s side aren’t in sparkling shape either, but they’ve shown a touch more life going forward lately. Still, this feels like one of those matches where one goal could decide everything.
Clermont Foot Form & Analysis
Clermont’s recent story is frustrating rather than disastrous. They ended up with a point from a lively 2-2 draw at Grenoble Foot 38 on 3 April, and that at least stopped the slide after two straight home defeats to Red Star FC and Pau FC, both by a single goal. Before that came a narrow 2-1 loss away to Troyes, which was another game that slipped away by fine margins. Go back a little further and you’ll find the better side of their season: a 2-1 home win over USL Dunkerque and a 2-0 success at US Boulogne Côte-d’Opale. So there’s something there. They’re not broken. But they’ve been too inconsistent to trust.
The home record tells the same tale. Clermont have picked up 16 points from 14 home matches, with four wins, four draws and six defeats. They’ve scored 15 and conceded 15 at the ground they’re using this season, which is a neat reflection of a team that hasn’t really imposed itself either way. Fifteen goals at home is low. That’s the problem. They’ve managed to stay competitive, but they’ve rarely turned territorial edge into a proper advantage. You can usually expect a tight game when Clermont are at home. This year, though, tight has too often meant flat.
One encouraging sign is that they’re not short of moments in attack. The draw at Grenoble brought two goals, and they did create enough to feel aggrieved about losing control earlier in the month. Yet the bigger issue is what happens after they score, or when they don’t. Clermont have now gone four league matches without a win, and the run has been built on missed opportunities and a lack of killer instinct. They’ll fancy their chances of having the ball in decent areas on Friday, but that doesn’t automatically translate into goals. It hasn’t all season.
Nancy Form & Analysis
Nancy are in a similar lane, just with a different shape to the problem. Their last six have produced four draws and two defeats, and that alone makes the seven-game wait for a league win feel even heavier. The most recent outing was a 1-1 home draw with Saint-Étienne on 4 April, a match Nancy led early through Zakaria Fdaouch before being pegged back deep into stoppage time. That one hurt. Before that, they drew 0-0 away to US Boulogne Côte-d’Opale, lost 4-2 at home to Le Mans, and went down 3-0 at home to Montpellier. The trip to Stade Lavallois ended 1-1, while Grenoble were held 0-0. In short, Nancy have been hard to beat in patches, but they haven’t been convincing enough to take games by the scruff of the neck.
Away from home, the numbers are modest rather than catastrophic. Nancy’s away record reads three wins, five draws and six defeats, with 13 goals scored and 19 conceded. That’s not the profile of a team that travels badly in every sense, but it is the record of a side that too often leaves themselves with too much to do. They can keep things relatively respectable on the road — as shown by the point at Boulogne — yet the attacking output is thin. Thirteen away goals across the campaign is below par, and when you combine that with 19 conceded, it’s easy to see why their matches regularly drift into low-scoring territory.
There is a tougher edge to their recent work, mind you. They’ve drawn three of their last four, and they were never outplayed for long periods at Saint-Étienne. But the warning signs are obvious. Nancy gave up 14 shots there and only managed six themselves. Against Le Mans and Montpellier, the gaps were exposed badly. Against a Clermont side that’s been laboured rather than free-flowing, Correa will want a compact, disciplined performance first and foremost. He won’t be looking for a shootout. That would suit nobody in their current state.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other well enough, and the recent meetings have been stubbornly low-scoring. Nancy beat Clermont 1-0 in December 2025, which is the freshest reference point and a useful one for anyone trying to read this fixture. Before that, Clermont had tended to do slightly better in the longer run, winning 2-0 at home in November 2020 and 2-1 away in February 2020, while there was also a 2-2 draw in Clermont back in September 2019. But the rivalry has mostly leaned toward tight margins, and that fits the current shape of both teams.
There’s a more specific angle here too: fewer than 10.5 corners has landed in seven of the last eight head-to-head meetings. That doesn’t decide the result, of course, but it does reinforce the picture of a match that rarely bursts open. No one should expect chaos. Not with these two.
We Predict: BTTS - No
BTTS - No at 5/6 is the play here, and it looks a better angle than trying to call a winner in a game that feels almost deliberately awkward. Clermont’s home return of 15 goals in 14 league matches is plain enough. Nancy’s away haul of 13 goals in 14 is just as telling. Put those together, and the idea of both sides scoring starts to look a touch generous. One goal may be enough. Two would already feel like a stretch.
The price is fair, and the scoreline we’re leaning towards is 0-1 to Nancy. That may sound a little cold on Clermont, but Nancy have the better recent habit of getting into tight, scruffy games and surviving them. Clermont’s four-match winless run and Nancy’s seven-game wait for victory pull in different directions, yet both point to caution rather than ambition. If you want a different angle, under 2.5 goals has a live case too. This should be a low-energy, low-margin contest.