FC Ingolstadt 04 host VfL Osnabrück in the 3. Liga on Saturday afternoon, and the stakes are very different for the two clubs. Ingolstadt are trying to steady a season that’s drifted towards mid-table mediocrity, while Osnabrück arrive with promotion pressure on their shoulders and top spot to protect. One side needs a reset. The other needs three points to keep the chase under control.
For Sabrina Wittmann’s Ingolstadt, this is less about dreams and more about damage limitation. They sit 14th on 40 points, a decent cushion above the bottom end but nowhere near where they’d want to be given the goals they’ve scored this season. Osnabrück, under Timo Schultz, are leading the division with 67 points. That brings its own weight. Every slip gets magnified now. Every away day matters.
The first meeting between these teams this season finished 1-0 to Osnabrück, and there’s no shortage of familiarity between them. Ingolstadt have found the balance in this fixture hard to crack. Still, they’ve usually been capable of landing a punch at home, and their recent games have carried enough chaos to make a clean, cagey afternoon feel unlikely.
FC Ingolstadt 04 Form & Analysis
Ingolstadt come into this game in rough shape. Their last six league outings tell a pretty grim story: a 1-1? No, worse. They’ve taken one win from six, and that win came away at SSV Ulm 1846 on 15 March, a 3-1 result that briefly hinted at a turn. Since then, it’s been a steady slide. They lost at home to SC Verl, then fell at Alemannia Aachen, were beaten by Viktoria Köln in Ingolstadt, lost narrowly at 1. FC Saarbrücken, and then were thumped 4-1 at Rot-Weiss Essen. That’s four defeats on the bounce, and the final score in Essen flattered them a touch. They were opened up far too easily.
The numbers from that trip north are blunt. Ingolstadt managed 12 shots and six on target, but they also allowed 29 attempts and 10 on target at the other end. Their xG sat at 1.68, which tells you they did have moments, yet their xGA of 2.42 reflects how flimsy they were when Essen went at them. That’s been the recurring issue. They can score, and they’ve scored 52 league goals overall, but the back line doesn’t look settled and the game can get away from them quickly. Seven matches without a clean sheet is the kind of run that drags a team into trouble.
At home, Ingolstadt’s record is middling rather than disastrous: five wins, five draws and six losses, with 23 goals scored and 22 conceded. That’s the profile of a side who can compete but too often fail to control matches. They’ve had enough cutting edge to make life awkward for visitors, yet that slight defensive edge at home has disappeared. One goal in the last two home league games against Viktoria Köln and Alemannia Aachen says plenty. It’s not a fortress. Far from it.
The issue isn’t just that they lose; it’s how often they have to chase games after conceding first. Ingolstadt have been first to concede in four of their last five and that’s a nasty habit against the league leaders. When you keep giving good teams the opening, you’re usually asking for trouble. They’ll fancy chances of scoring here — especially with their home return and the general openness of their recent matches — but they can’t keep relying on recovery mode. At some point, that stops working.
VfL Osnabrück Form & Analysis
Osnabrück’s form is far healthier, even if the trip to Duisburg on 7 April snapped a strong run. They lost that one 1-0 away, but they responded properly by beating Energie Cottbus 1-0 at home last weekend. Before the Duisburg setback, they’d beaten Schweinfurt 4-0, drawn 2-2 with Borussia Mönchengladbach in a friendly, won 1-0 at TSG Hoffenheim II, and beaten Waldhof Mannheim 4-1. That’s a proper promotion run. Sharp, resilient, and usually in control.
Timo Schultz has his team doing the right things in the right areas. They’ve kept the goals against column tidy all season — only 27 conceded in 33 league matches — and that’s the best defensive record in the division by some distance. Their away record is the other big reason they’re top: 10 wins, three draws and only three defeats on the road, with 29 scored and 17 conceded. That’s serious away form. You don’t reach the top of the table without it.
The Cottbus win was hardly a thriller, but it did the job. Osnabrück posted just 0.70 xG and conceded 0.79, with nine shots to 11 and only three on target. Still, they found a way through through Ismail Badjie on 50 minutes and then shut the door. That’s what good promotion sides do. They don’t need a feast every week. They’re comfortable winning ugly, and they’re comfortable keeping the game on a short leash once they’re in front.
There is one small wrinkle. Osnabrück don’t always blow teams away away from home, and they’ve had a few tighter scorelines on the road than their overall table position might suggest. But they’ve still won 10 away league games, which is the number that matters. Can they control Ingolstadt if the home side get moments in transition? That’s the real question. Given Ingolstadt’s shaky defensive run, Osnabrück should get their chances. They’ve been far steadier, far more convincing, and far less chaotic. That usually counts for a lot in April.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has leaned Osnabrück’s way recently. They beat Ingolstadt 1-0 at home in November 2025, and they also won 1-0 in the corresponding meeting in April 2025. Ingolstadt did get the better of this matchup in November 2024 with a 4-2 home win, but that felt like the outlier in a run that’s otherwise been pretty tight and pretty unforgiving for them.
The broader pattern is simple enough. Osnabrück tend to keep this under control, while Ingolstadt haven’t been able to turn home advantage into consistent results against them. There’s a clean-sheet angle here too: Ingolstadt haven’t managed one in this fixture across the last four meetings. That won’t fill them with confidence.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 8/13 looks the best route here. It isn’t a flashy price, but it’s a sensible one. Ingolstadt have been involved in plenty of open games recently, they’ve scored in enough home fixtures to matter, and Osnabrück’s away record suggests they’ll carry enough threat to find a goal of their own. The 62% model probability sits comfortably in the same space. This isn’t a bet on a goal glut. It’s a bet on both sides doing enough to land a punch.
The 1-2 correct-score call fits the shape of the match. Osnabrück look the stronger, more reliable side, and their away numbers are too good to ignore. Ingolstadt should still get on the board at home, though, especially with Osnabrück not always running away with games on the road. That said, if you wanted a slightly firmer angle, Osnabrück to win and both teams to score would be the natural alternative. The visitors’ promotion push has more substance, and Ingolstadt’s recent defending looks too fragile to trust.