KAA Gent welcome Sint-Truidense VV to the Ghelamco Arena on Sunday afternoon in the Pro League Championship Round, with both clubs still chasing something meaningful as the season edges into its decisive stretch. Gent sit fifth overall on 24 points, while STVV are up in third on 29. That gap is small enough to keep this feeling live, but it’s big enough to give the visitors a bit more breathing room. Gent need points to keep pace in the top-half shake-up. Sint-Truiden need them to protect their position and keep the pressure on the sides above them.
There’s also the shape of the contest to consider. This isn’t a cagey mid-table dead rubber. Gent have been involved in games with goals at both ends, while STVV’s away numbers are strong enough to make them awkward visitors, but not so solid that you’d trust them to shut anyone out for long. The Championship Round tends to sharpen edges rather than soften them. You don’t get many tidy afternoons there.
The recent meeting history points to a game with life in it too. STVV beat Gent 2-1 at home in November 2025, and won 3-1 in July 2025 as well. Gent did enjoy a stronger run in the older meetings, winning several before that, but the latest two have gone Sint-Truiden’s way. That’s the sort of wrinkle that matters when confidence is fragile.
KAA Gent Form & Analysis
Gent’s last six tell a mixed story. They opened March with a heavy 3-0 defeat away to KRC Genk, then responded well enough to beat KV Mechelen 3-1 at home and follow that with a 2-0 home win over Zulte Waregem. A 3-1 away success at FCV Dender suggested momentum, but the wheels have wobbled since. They were held 1-1 at home by Mechelen on 6 April, then lost 3-1 away to Anderlecht on 12 April after conceding late. That’s two matches without a win, and the latest defeat was messy. It got away from them.
The Anderlecht game was a bit of a warning. Gent actually had their moments going forward, with 1.44 xG and four big chances, but they couldn’t control the closing stages. A penalty from Wilfried Kanga put them ahead early enough to build on, yet they were punished by late goals from Yari Verschaeren, Tristan Degreef and Adriano Bertaccini. That sort of collapse sticks with a team. Gent have scored in five of their last six, though, and that’s the encouraging bit. They’re not short of attacking intent. They just keep leaving the back door open.
At home, Gent have been decent rather than dominant. Their league record at the Ghelamco Arena reads eight wins, three draws and five losses, with 28 goals scored and 18 conceded. That’s a solid base, not a fortress. The numbers lean toward games opening up rather than being strangled. Gent average enough threat in their own ground to make them dangerous, and they’ve also been vulnerable enough to drag opponents into the contest. This is a side that usually gets chances. It doesn’t always control what happens after.
Sint-Truidense VV Form & Analysis
Sint-Truiden arrive with a far rougher recent run. Their last six have brought five defeats and one win, and the results have all come against decent opposition. They lost 2-1 at home to Club Brugge on 11 April, after leading through Ryotaro Ito’s early goal. Before that came a 1-0 defeat away to Royale Union Saint-Gilloise on 4 April, then a 1-3 home loss to the same opponent in March, and a 1-0 reverse at KRC Genk. The only bright spot in that stretch was a 2-1 home win over Cercle Brugge on 8 March. Since then, they’ve looked increasingly stretched. Four games without a win now. That’s not the kind of form you want heading into a trip to Gent.
Still, STVV haven’t exactly been passive away from home. Their league record on the road is actually strong on paper: eight wins, two draws and six losses, with 24 scored and 17 conceded. That’s a proper away profile, the sort that suggests they can live in matches and cause problems. The issue is that the recent away form hasn’t matched the season-long numbers. They’ve lost at Union, Genk and Antwerp, and each of those defeats came by a single goal. So they’re not getting blown away, but they are getting edged. That’s a dangerous habit when you’re facing a home side that can score.
Their latest loss to Club Brugge was a decent enough performance in isolation. STVV generated 2.08 xG, got 19 shots away, and forced the issue for spells. They even led through Ito before conceding twice. That tells you they can create chances against top opposition. It also tells you why they’re frustrating. They’ll ask questions, but they don’t always live through the answers. Wouter Vrancken will want more bite from them in both boxes. Without it, their strong away record starts to look a little hollow.
Head-to-Head
The recent head-to-head is tilted in Sint-Truiden’s favour, and that’s worth a glance. They beat Gent 2-1 in November 2025 and 3-1 in July 2025, so they’ve had the upper hand in the last two league meetings. Gent did dominate the earlier run, including wins by 2-0 and 2-1, and there was also a 1-1 draw in October 2024. So this hasn’t been one-way traffic over the longer spell. It’s more a case of the balance shifting lately.
One pattern stands out from the meetings at Gent: goals usually come. Gent have also tended to strike first in this fixture, and the games haven’t been shy on incident. That fits the wider feel of the match. These sides don’t often sit in and wait. They go after each other. Sometimes that helps the underdog. Sometimes it turns into chaos.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/6 for this one. It’s a short price, but it’s still the right angle. Gent have scored in five of their last six and conceded in four of those, while STVV have lost four straight and kept very few games under control at either end. Put those together and you get a match where chances should come early enough to keep the tempo honest. Neither defence looks remotely watertight.
Gent’s home record points the same way. They’ve scored 28 times in 16 league games at home and shipped 18. STVV’s away numbers are also lively, with 24 goals scored and 17 conceded on the road. That’s a decent mix for a goals bet. A 2-1 Gent win feels the cleanest call, with the hosts just about doing enough in front of their own crowd while STVV get on the board as well. If you wanted a slightly safer angle, both teams to score would be the obvious alternative, but Over 2.5 looks the stronger play.