FC Sion welcome FC Lausanne-Sport to the Tourbillon on Sunday evening in the Swiss Super League, with both sides chasing different but still important goals as the season tightens. Sion sit fifth and are hanging around the European places, while Lausanne-Sport are down in ninth and need points to keep themselves clear of trouble and stay in touch with the pack above them. It’s not a title race, but it matters. A lot.
There’s a bit of edge to this one too. These are two clubs who know each other well, and the recent meetings have had enough goals, draws and frustration to keep both sets of supporters on their toes. Sion come into the game on the back of a swaggering 4-0 win at Grasshopper Club Zürich, while Lausanne-Sport edged FC Winterthur 2-1 at home. Different moods, same need for more. One side wants to push on. The other wants breathing space.
At this stage of the league campaign, every swing matters. Sion are looking to turn a solid home base into a real platform for a top-half finish, maybe even something more. Lausanne-Sport, under Peter Zeidler, need to show they can travel with more authority, because their away record is still too patchy for comfort. The numbers say goals should be involved. The rivalry says it won’t be calm.
FC Sion Form & Analysis
FC Sion’s recent run has had a bit of everything, but the headline is simple: they’ve steadied themselves. Didier Tholot’s side have taken seven points from their last three league games, and that 4-0 demolition of Grasshopper on 6 April was the sort of result that changes the mood in a dressing room. They were sharp from the start, with Rilind Nivokazi striking early, then Liam Scott Chipperfield, Ali Kabacalman from the spot and Winsley Boteli all getting in on the act. Four goals away from home. That’s not luck. That’s a team playing with confidence.
Go back a little further and the picture is more mixed, but not shabby. Sion drew 1-1 at home to St. Gallen, won 2-1 away at FC Zürich, then shared another 1-1 with Winterthur at home. Before that came a narrow 2-1 defeat at Lugano and a goalless draw at Servette. There’s a pattern here. They’re not easy to beat, and they’ve been picking up points in different ways. Four matches unbeaten since that loss in Lugano. That’s a proper base to work from.
Their home record is decent without being fearsome: seven wins, six draws and three defeats, with 22 scored and only 12 conceded at the Tourbillon. The defensive numbers stand out. Twelve goals shipped in 16 home league games is tidy stuff, and it tells you Sion rarely let matches get away from them on their own patch. The flip side? They haven’t turned that control into enough home wins to sit higher up the table. They keep things tight, but they don’t always kill games off. Still, with 48 league goals overall, there’s enough attacking quality there to expect chances, especially against a side that’s been loose at the back on the road.
What makes Sion awkward to handle is that they can hurt you in different phases. They’re not just one-speed. The recent 4-0 at Grasshopper was built on efficiency, but the season-long home record says they’re also comfortable grinding. That blend is useful here, because Lausanne-Sport don’t exactly travel with a lockdown defence. Sion have also been scoring regularly enough at home to make you think they’ll get on the board. That’s the key question. Can they turn control into two or three goals? Against this opponent, they probably can.
FC Lausanne-Sport Form & Analysis
FC Lausanne-Sport arrive with a far less serene mood around them. Peter Zeidler’s side did get the job done against Winterthur last time out, winning 2-1 at home, and that mattered after a rough patch. But the overall picture is still one of inconsistency. Before that win, they were thumped 4-0 at FC Luzern, beaten 2-0 at home by Young Boys, and then won two away games on the spin — 3-2 at Grasshopper and 2-1 at FC Zürich — before losing 2-1 at home to Basel. It’s a mixed bag, and there’s no escaping the defensive fragility that keeps cropping up.
Their away form is part of the problem. Five wins, four draws and seven defeats on the road is not disastrous, but 19 goals scored and 27 conceded away from home tells a clearer story. They’ll score. They’re usually in the game. Yet they don’t often keep things under control for long enough. The 4-0 loss at Luzern was a reminder of how quickly their structure can collapse, and even in wins like the one at Zürich, they’ve had to ride their luck and trade punches rather than dictate play. That’s fine when it comes off. It’s a mess when it doesn’t.
Zeidler does at least have a team that finds the net. Lausanne-Sport have 47 league goals, only one fewer than Sion, so they’re not short of attacking threat. The issue is balance. Their overall record of 10 wins, nine draws and 13 defeats leaves them stuck in mid-to-lower-table territory, and their away numbers are worse than Sion’s home profile. They’ve also gone a long time without a clean sheet. Fifteen matches without one is a brutal run for a side trying to climb the table. You can’t keep asking your attack to rescue you every week. Eventually, that catches up.
Mind you, there is a stubborn streak in Lausanne-Sport too. They’ve shown they can score away from home and they’ve already caused Sion a few problems in recent meetings. But they tend to concede first, and once that happens they’re usually in a scrap rather than a plan. That matters here because Sion at home don’t need much encouragement. If Lausanne give them space early, the hosts will fancy a fast start and a game that opens up quickly.
Head-to-Head
These meetings have had a habit of avoiding clean conclusions. Lausanne-Sport are unbeaten in the last four league meetings with Sion, which includes a 2-2 draw in Lausanne in November and a 0-0 at Sion in September. Go back a little further and Lausanne also won 2-0 at home in April 2025 and 1-0 in November 2024. Sion, though, have had their moments too. They hammered Lausanne 4-0 at home in July 2024, and they’ve taken enough from this fixture over the years to know it’s rarely one-sided for long.
The broader pattern is a familiar one: not much between them, but usually enough tension to keep the game open. The recent results lean towards Lausanne-Sport avoiding defeat, yet the scoring trend in both camps makes this fixture more interesting than a standard lower-table meeting. You wouldn’t be shocked if both nets are shaken again.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/6 here. It’s the cleanest angle on the game. Sion have just smashed four past Grasshopper, they’ve been scoring steadily at home, and Lausanne-Sport bring an away record that’s open at the back and capable of producing a messy, end-to-end contest. The market has been kind to this kind of matchup too: Lausanne-Sport’s games have gone over 2.5 goals in seven of their last eight, and that kind of trend doesn’t happen by accident.
A 2-1 Sion win fits the script. The hosts have the steadier home shape, the tighter defensive numbers and a bit more momentum, while Lausanne-Sport look dangerous enough to nick a goal but not solid enough to shut the door. Could it finish 2-2 again? Sure, that wouldn’t be a surprise. Still, Sion’s home edge tips it their way, and goals feel more likely than caution. If you want a slight twist, both teams to score has obvious appeal too.