KRC Genk host Oud-Heverlee Leuven on Sunday evening in the Pro League’s Conference League Playoffs, and there’s still plenty on the line for both sides. Genk are trying to keep their European push on track after a lively spell of results, while Leuven arrive needing a response after a bruising defeat to Standard Liège last time out. This is the sort of fixture that can swing a playoff campaign very quickly. One good win changes the mood. One bad night changes the maths.
For Nicky Hayen’s Genk, the task is simple enough: keep the pressure on, keep scoring, and make home advantage count. Felice Mazzu’s Leuven, on the other hand, need to steady themselves after a run that’s been more stop-start than convincing. They’ve shown they can hurt teams away from home, but they’ve also been far too open. If they give Genk the same sort of looks they gave Standard, they’ll be in trouble.
There’s also a clear pattern in this pairing. Genk have had the upper hand for a long time now, and the meetings between these two usually bring goals. That matters here, because this isn’t the sort of game where either side looks built to sit back and go through the motions. Genk want control and territory. Leuven need points and a bit of belief. You’d expect a fairly open contest.
KRC Genk Form & Analysis
Genk arrive on the back of a useful away win at Royal Antwerp, and it was exactly the kind of performance that keeps a playoff campaign moving in the right direction. They came through 2-1 at Antwerp on 3 April, then did it with some authority in the right moments. Daan Heymans struck before half-time, added a penalty early in the second half, and Christopher Scott finished the job late on. The xG was close enough — 1.54 to 1.10 — but Genk looked the more clinical side when it mattered. That’s the key. They didn’t need to dominate every metric. They just needed to land the punches.
Before that, though, their form had a bit of a wild edge to it. The 5-5 draw at RAAL La Louvière on 22 March was a mess in the best and worst senses, the sort of game that tells you Genk can score from anywhere but won’t always keep the door shut. In between that chaos and the Antwerp win, there was the European tie against SC Freiburg — a 5-1 defeat away from home after they’d beaten the Germans 1-0 in Genk — and that sums them up pretty neatly. They can be dangerous, they can be brave, and they can also be exposed when the game gets stretched. Still, there’s enough attacking threat there to trust them to find chances against most opponents.
At home, Genk’s recent baseline has been solid rather than spectacular. They beat Sint-Truidense 1-0 and Freiburg 1-0 in back-to-back home matches, so there’s proof they can grind out results when needed. That said, their bigger issue is not chance creation. It’s control. They’ve scored in plenty of games, but they’ve also left openings, and the wider run suggests they’re rarely in sterile, low-event matches. That’s why their games keep leaning towards goals. Three wins in their last six tells you the form is decent. The way those results have unfolded tells you the games are rarely quiet.
The numbers sit comfortably with that picture. Genk’s attack has been productive enough, their most recent away win came with three big chances created, and their season pattern points to a side that can get on top early and keep pressing. They’ve also shown a habit of scoring first. Against Leuven, that matters a great deal. Give Genk the opening goal and the game usually opens up on their terms.
Oud-Heverlee Leuven Form & Analysis
Leuven’s last six have been messy, and the defeat to Standard Liège on 4 April was a rough one to take. They actually got themselves back into the match after the break through Henok Teklab, then Dennis Eckert Ayensa levelled matters later on, but the collapse that followed was brutal. An own goal by Ewoud Pletinckx and a late penalty for Standard turned a manageable evening into a 3-1 loss. The shot count was close, 14-12, yet the xG profile was not flattering: 1.24 for Leuven against 1.47 for Standard. That was a game they didn’t really deserve to win, and they certainly didn’t deserve to lose in such a sloppy fashion.
Still, they’re not arriving without a pulse. A 1-0 home win over Royal Antwerp on 22 March showed they can be compact and stubborn when the match suits them. They also went to Sporting Charleroi and won 2-0 on 14 March, which is a proper away result and one that should count for something here. But the problem is consistency. That Antwerp win came after a 1-0 home defeat to Westerlo, and before that there were heavy losses at Anderlecht and Club Brugge, both of which exposed the same weakness: when Leuven are forced to defend for long periods, they can unravel quickly.
The away record is the part that really raises the alarm. Leuven have scored away from home, and they can nick a result if the game stays tight, but the defensive returns on the road are simply not good enough. They were beaten 5-1 at Anderlecht and 2-1 at Club Brugge, and that tells you a lot about their ceiling away from home when the opposition carries real attacking threat. Can they keep Genk down to a manageable scoreline? That’s the big question. Right now, there isn’t much evidence to say yes.
Their recent performances also point to a side that can create moments without sustaining pressure. Leuven had five shots on target against Standard, and they did score twice through Teklab and Eckert Ayensa in the match narrative, but the back line didn’t hold. That’s been the story too often. They’re competitive in patches, then they lose shape. Against a Genk side that likes to attack early and keep the tempo high, that’s a dangerous habit.
Head-to-Head
Genk have had the better of this fixture for a while. The most recent meeting came on 30 November 2025, when Genk won 2-1 at home, and they also won 2-1 away on 15 August 2025. Go back a bit further and the pattern holds: Genk beat Leuven 2-0 in January 2025, won 3-1 in November 2023, and picked up another 2-1 victory in April 2023. Leuven’s wins in the series have been rare, with their 3-1 home success in August 2024 and a 2-1 win in January 2024 standing out as the exceptions rather than the rule.
The broader trend is even clearer. These meetings usually bring goals, and Leuven have struggled badly to keep Genk out. There’s a real edge to Genk’s head-to-head record, and it’s not just about wins. It’s about the match pattern. Genk tend to strike first, and once they do, Leuven are often forced into a game they don’t fully control. That’s been the story far too often for Mazzu’s side.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/6 here. It’s a fair price, and it fits the shape of this match far better than a cautious market. Genk have been involved in goal-heavy games for weeks, Leuven have looked fragile away from home, and the head-to-head history points the same way. There’s enough attacking quality on both sides for this to open up, especially if Genk land the first goal.
A 2-1 home win feels the right scoreline. Genk have the more reliable attack and the stronger recent form, but Leuven have enough about them to get on the board, especially given Genk’s habit of leaving space behind when the game stretches. If you wanted a smaller alternative, Genk to win and both teams to score has some appeal too. But the cleanest play is the totals angle. This one should have goals.