FC Thun host Basel in the Swiss Super League on Saturday evening, and it’s a proper top-versus-chasing pack contest with real weight at both ends of the table. Thun sit top with 71 points and have opened up a commanding position in the title race, while Basel are fourth on 53 and still have work to do if they want to drag themselves back into the European places.
For Thun, this is about staying calm, staying efficient and avoiding a slip that would hand hope to the sides behind them. For Basel, it’s almost the opposite. They need a statement away result, because the gap to the summit is already huge and dropping points now would make their route to silverware or even a higher finish that much harder. The pressure is on the visitors to show they can live with the league’s pace-setters.
There’s also some recent history here. Basel beat Thun 3-1 in September 2025, but Thun got the last laugh on 1 February 2026 with a 2-1 win in Basel. That’s the sort of recent split that keeps a fixture honest. Neither side can assume anything.
FC Thun Form & Analysis
Thun arrive off the back of a narrow 1-0 defeat at FC Lugano on 4 April, a result that stung because it came after a real surge. Before that, they’d been beaten 2-1 at FC Zürich, but the broader picture is still far healthier than one away loss or even two. They hammered Grasshopper Club Zürich 5-1 at home on 14 March, then went to BSC Young Boys and came away with a 2-1 win on 8 March, which is no small thing. Add the 2-2 draw with St. Gallen and the 2-1 home win over Luzern, and you’ve got a team that’s been playing with genuine conviction.
That run says a lot about why they’re top. Thun don’t just nick results; they score enough goals to control games. Seventy-two league goals is a heavy total for this stage of the season, and they’ve only conceded 36. At home, the numbers are even sharper: 11 wins, two draws and three defeats, with 39 scored and 19 conceded. That’s a strong record by any standard. They’re not flawless at their own ground — nobody with three home losses is — but they’re hard to shake there, and they usually respond when they go behind. That matters in a game where Basel are quite capable of landing a punch.
The only real question is whether the setback at Lugano is the start of a wobble or just a bump in the road. It feels like the latter. Thun have been involved in plenty of open games, though, and that’s worth keeping in mind. Their recent matches have often tilted towards goals, and they’ve shown a habit of being caught first as well. That won’t worry them if they keep scoring, but it does open the door a little for Basel. Still, at home, Thun usually make teams pay for any slack defending. They’ll expect to do that again.
Basel Form & Analysis
Basel’s latest outing was a wild one. They drew 3-3 with BSC Young Boys at home on 4 April, and it was the sort of game that could leave a manager with mixed feelings. On one hand, they showed fighting spirit to stay in it, even after the contest kept swinging around them. On the other, conceding three at home against a direct rival is hardly ideal. Before that, though, there was plenty to like: a 2-0 win at Winterthur, a 3-1 home defeat of Servette, and a 1-0 home win over Grasshopper. They also beat Lausanne-Sport 2-1 away, which is a useful reminder that this side can travel.
The away record is respectable if not especially intimidating. Eight wins, two draws and six defeats, with 25 goals scored and 27 conceded. That gives you the sense of a team that can compete on the road but doesn’t always stay in control for long enough. They’ve lost away at St. Gallen and Basel’s overall rhythm still looks a touch more volatile than Thun’s, even if the visitors can point to good results and some impressive attacking moments. Stephan Lichtsteiner’s side have enough quality to make this uncomfortable. They just haven’t been reliable enough to be trusted blindly.
Basel’s recent pattern is interesting because they’ve alternated between tidy, functional wins and matches that open up into chaos. The 3-3 with Young Boys is the clearest example. They didn’t fold, and that’s a positive, but they also looked vulnerable when the game got stretched. Against a Thun side that usually asks questions at home, that’s a concern. Can they keep it tight for 90 minutes? That’s the big one. If they can’t, they’re in trouble. Their best hope is to get on the front foot early and force Thun to chase, because the longer this stays level, the more it suits the hosts.
Head-to-Head
These two have already shared a sharp little swing of results this season. Basel won 3-1 when the sides met in September 2025, but Thun hit back with a 2-1 victory in Basel on 1 February 2026. That split tells you what you need to know: there’s no lasting psychological edge either way, and home advantage has mattered.
Zooming out a bit, the meeting pattern isn’t one-sided. There have been tight games, a couple of lower-scoring draws, and enough goals to keep the fixture lively. Four of the last five meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and that fits the feel of this matchup. It tends to open up. It rarely stays neat for long.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing FC Thun to win at 8/11 here. That price is fair for the league leaders at home, and the case is pretty straightforward: they’ve been excellent at their ground, Basel are good enough to threaten but not stable enough to trust, and Thun already showed in February that they can beat this opponent when it matters. The home side’s 39 goals scored and 19 conceded at home is the sort of split that earns respect. Basel’s 25 away goals and 27 conceded tell a different story.
A 2-1 Thun win feels right. Basel should get chances — they usually do — but Thun’s home output is stronger, and their overall control of matches has been better. There’s a bit of tension here because both teams have scoring quality, so this isn’t the kind of home win that feels air-tight. If you prefer something a touch safer, Thun in the draw no bet market would be the natural alternative.