Kawasaki Frontale host Kashima Antlers in a Sunday morning J1 League East meeting on 12 April 2026, and it feels like a proper early-season test of nerve between two clubs heading in different directions. Kawasaki sit fourth with 14 points from nine games, still close enough to the top group to turn this into a springboard. Kashima, though, are the league leaders on 23 points and have barely put a foot wrong. For the home side, this is a chance to prove that the heavy defeat to Yokohama F. Marinos was a blip. For the visitors, it’s about keeping control of the title race and showing that their strong start isn’t built on sand.
There’s a bit of edge to this one too, because these sides met only a few weeks ago. Kashima edged Kawasaki 1-0 at home on 14 March, and that result matters. It told us something about the current balance between them. Kawasaki can still threaten anybody on their day, but Kashima have looked more stable, more ruthless, and far harder to shake.
Kawasaki Frontale Form & Analysis
Kawasaki’s recent run has been a mixed bag, and that’s putting it kindly. They opened this sequence at home against Mito Hollyhock on 1 March and had to settle for a 2-2 draw after letting a game they should’ve won drift away. Then came the trip to Kashima on 14 March, where they lost 1-0 and struggled to make their mark in the final third. A 2-0 away win at Tokyo Verdy followed on 18 March, which was a tidy response, only for Yokohama F. Marinos to tear into them at home in a brutal 5-0 defeat on 22 March. That was a proper reality check. Since then, they’ve steadied it a touch with a 1-1 draw at Machida Zelvia and a 3-2 home win over Urawa Red Diamonds last Saturday. Better. Still messy.
That Urawa result was a reminder of what Kawasaki can do when they get on the front foot. They scored early through Kenta Nemoto, benefited from a Danilo Boza own goal, and then survived a late wobble before So Kawahara sealed it in stoppage time. The numbers from that game were tight enough — 1.13 xG to 1.30, 14 shots to 13, three on target apiece — so it wasn’t some wild domination. It was more about hanging in, taking key moments, and refusing to fold after the Marinos hammering. They’ve got 14 goals in nine league games overall, which is decent, but they’ve also shipped 16. That’s the problem. They’re not controlling games well enough, especially at home.
Their home record tells a blunt story. Two wins, one draw and two defeats from five at their ground, with 11 scored and 14 conceded. That’s not the sort of base you want when the league leaders come calling. They can score at home, no doubt about that, but they’re leaving the back door open far too often. Three of those five home matches have finished with Kawasaki conceding at least twice, and that’s a bad habit against a Kashima side that doesn’t need much invitation. Mind you, the one encouraging trend is that Kawasaki tend to get games open. They’ve scored in enough of their matches to keep this one alive. Whether they can keep Kashima quiet at the other end is another matter entirely.
Kashima Antlers Form & Analysis
Kashima arrive in much stronger shape, even if their last outing ended level. They went to Mito Hollyhock on 4 April and came away with a 1-1 draw, but the performance was much better than the scoreline. They posted 2.18 xG, produced 19 shots, hit the target four times and created six big chances. That’s a team that should’ve won. Arata Watanabe put them ahead, Léo Ceará equalised deep into stoppage time from the spot, and the only real blemish was Danilo Cardoso’s second yellow after an hour. The frustration there is obvious. Still, one draw doesn’t dent what has been a fearsome run.
Before that, Kashima beat JEF United Chiba 2-1, won 3-0 away at Machida Zelvia, and then beat Kawasaki 1-0 at home. They also handled Tokyo Verdy 2-0, and away from home they’ve already shown they can do serious damage, as the 3-2 win at Urawa Red Diamonds on 28 February proved. Five wins in six is the sort of form that separates contenders from pretenders. They’ve scored 16 goals and conceded only five in the league, which is excellent by any standard. There’s balance here. They’re not just winning by outscoring chaos. They’re defending properly too.
Their away record is especially solid. Two wins, two draws and one defeat from five away league games, with eight goals scored and only four conceded. That’s a platform. Not flashy, not reckless, just efficient. They can sit in a game and then strike when it opens up, and they’ve been good at doing the ugly stuff when needed. That matters at Kawasaki, where the home side will want a fast start and some momentum. Kashima won’t panic if they don’t get it. They’re too composed for that now. Toru Oniki has this team moving with confidence, and they don’t need many chances to make you pay.
There’s also a psychological angle. Kashima have won four of the last five meetings between these clubs, including the most recent one in March. That gives them a bit of extra comfort going in. They know Kawasaki can be rattled. They know the home side’s defence can crack. And they’ve got the league position to back up the feeling that they’re the more complete team right now.
Head-to-Head
These meetings have had a clear lean in recent seasons. Kashima have won four of the last five against Kawasaki Frontale, including that 1-0 victory on 14 March 2026. Before that, the sides traded blows with plenty of goals: Kawasaki won 2-1 in July 2025, Kashima took another 2-1 result in May 2025, and the pattern stretches back further with both teams landing big wins at different points.
What stands out most is the general tone of the fixture. It usually produces action. Seven of the last eight meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and both teams have scored in four of the last five. So there’s history here for an open game, even if Kashima have had the better of the results. Kawasaki can usually find a way onto the scoresheet in this matchup. The question is whether they can keep pace for 90 minutes. That’s where they’ve come up short more often than not.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
We’re taking Double Chance X2 at 2/5 for this one. Kashima Antlers simply look the safer side. They’re top of the table, they’ve won seven of nine in the league, and their away record is strong enough to trust. Kawasaki have enough attacking threat to make life awkward, but their defensive numbers at home are shaky and they’ve been punished for that more than once already.
The 1-2 correct score feels about right. Kashima should create enough to score twice, especially against a Kawasaki side that’s conceded 16 goals in nine league matches. A tight, competitive game wouldn’t surprise anyone, but the visitors have been the more reliable outfit and they’ve already shown they can edge this fixture. If you want a slightly more adventurous angle, Kashima to win and both teams to score is live, though the straight double chance is the cleaner play.