Fortuna Sittard host NAC Breda in the VriendenLoterij Eredivisie on Sunday afternoon, and both clubs arrive with plenty still on the line. Fortuna sit 12th with 35 points, a few decent weeks away from turning a middling season into something more comfortable, while NAC are down in 17th on 24 points and staring at a proper scrap near the bottom. This one matters more for the visitors on paper, but Fortuna can’t afford to coast either. They’re not safe enough for that.
It’s a matchup that carries a bit of edge, too. Fortuna’s home record has been respectable without being rock solid, and NAC’s away form is one of the poorest in the division. That combination usually points one way, but these two have also produced open games before. The big question is simple: can Fortuna turn territory and home advantage into control, or will NAC find a way to drag this into the kind of messy contest that suits survival football?
Fortuna Sittard Form & Analysis
Fortuna’s recent run has been the sort that keeps a manager pacing the technical area. Danny Buijs has seen his side alternate between encouragement and frustration, with away wins at FC Volendam and NEC Nijmegen giving them some lift, only for home defeats against SC Telstar and FC Twente to knock the rhythm straight back out of them. The 4-1 loss at Ajax on 14 February was rough, but that was always going to be a brutal afternoon. The more telling results were the tighter ones: a 2-1 home win over Excelsior, a 3-2 success at NEC, then the 2-1 defeat to Twente in their last outing. That’s the story of Fortuna right now. They can score, they can make games lively, and they can be punished when things open up.
At home, though, they’ve been a bit more reliable than the league table alone might suggest. Their record at this ground reads six wins, three draws and five defeats, with 23 goals scored and 24 conceded. That’s not dominant, but it’s certainly not the home record of a side expecting trouble. They’ve generally been competitive, and the numbers point to games with chances at both ends rather than cautious shutouts. The fact they’ve scored 43 league goals overall while conceding 54 tells you what kind of team this is. They’ll land punches, but they don’t always block them.
There’s also a clearer pattern in Fortuna’s season than they’d probably like. They’ve gone 18 matches without a clean sheet, which is an awkward burden to carry into any fixture, even one against a struggling away side. Still, they’ve been on the front foot enough to make that less catastrophic than it might sound. Dimitris Limnios gave them an early lead against Twente, and the fact they created three big chances in that game says the attacking edge is still there. The problem was the same old one. They didn’t protect the lead, and once the game became stretched, they were exposed.
NAC Breda Form & Analysis
NAC’s season has been the harsher story. Carl Hoefkens has watched his side slip further into trouble, and the last six league matches have done little to ease the pressure. They ground out a 0-0 draw at home to Sparta Rotterdam on 5 April, which at least stopped the bleeding, but that result came after a miserable spell on the road. Before that, they were beaten 2-1 at PEC Zwolle, then thrashed 6-0 away to Go Ahead Eagles, and also lost 3-0 at SC Telstar. Sandwiched around those defeats was a wild 3-3 draw with Feyenoord at home — a reminder that NAC can still cause trouble when they’re playing with freedom, or when the game becomes chaotic enough.
Their away record is the real issue. One win, four draws and nine defeats from 14 away matches, with just 11 goals scored and 29 conceded, is relegation-zone material. Plain and simple. They’re not just losing on the road; they’re usually chasing the game early and spending too long in damage-control mode. That’s the danger here, because Fortuna have enough attacking threat to make NAC pay if they start slowly. A side with that sort of away profile can’t keep handing the initiative over. Eventually it catches up.
There are a couple of things NAC can lean on, mind you. They’ve shown they can score away from home in bursts when games break apart, even if those moments have been far too rare, and the 3-3 against Feyenoord proved they’re not completely toothless. But that’s the exception, not the rule. In their last six league games they’ve only won once, and even that 1-0 home victory over Volendam now feels like a long time ago. The bigger concern is the imbalance in their performances: they can hang around in one match, then collapse in the next. That kind of volatility is a nightmare when you’re fighting for points.
Still, their latest clean sheet against Sparta was a small positive. NAC won’t go to Sittard expecting to dominate possession or dictate tempo. They’ll want to stay compact, keep the crowd quiet and make this ugly. The trouble is that their away numbers are so poor that even a decent defensive plan doesn’t guarantee much. One concession and the whole script changes.
Head-to-Head
These two have met often enough recently to give the fixture a little extra shape, and the rivalry has been fairly even in terms of who gets the points. NAC Breda beat Fortuna 2-1 in Breda in August 2025, while Fortuna responded with a 1-0 home win in May 2025. Before that, NAC won 1-0 at home in September 2024. You have to go back a bit further to find higher-scoring meetings, but there has been a sense that neither side completely owns this fixture.
The broader pattern is worth a glance. In several of the recent meetings, NAC have found a way to strike first, and that matters here because Fortuna haven’t exactly been stopping teams from scoring. That won’t guarantee anything on Sunday, but it does hint at why the opening stages could matter so much. Whoever lands the first proper blow may well dictate the rest of it.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 for this one. It’s the clearest angle on the board. Fortuna have been involved in plenty of open games, they’ve gone 18 league matches without a clean sheet, and their home record suggests they’re far more likely to trade chances than sit on a lead. NAC are poor away from home, yes, but they’ve still shown enough in flashes to nick a goal, and a fixture against a shaky defensive side gives them a route in.
The 2-1 correct score feels right. Fortuna should have the better of the chances and enough home threat to edge it, but NAC won’t need much to get on the scoresheet if the game becomes stretched. That’s the key here. If Fortuna are at their usual levels going forward and not at their best at the back, BTTS looks live from the off. An alternative angle is Over 2.5 Goals, though that does lean on NAC contributing their share rather than simply hanging on.