KV Mechelen welcome Royale Union Saint-Gilloise to the AFAS Stadion on Sunday afternoon in the Pro League championship round, and the stakes are clear enough. Mechelen are trying to keep their push in the upper half alive and protect a respectable 5th-place position, while Union are chasing the title pace at the sharp end of the table from 2nd place. At this stage of the season, every point changes the mood around both clubs. One side wants to keep the pressure on the European places, the other is still in the thick of a title race.
This is also a fixture with a proper competitive edge. Mechelen’s season has been lively enough, with 40 goals scored and 38 conceded overall, which tells you they’ve usually been in games rather than walking through them. Union, though, are operating at a different level. They’ve won 20 of their 31 league matches, conceded just 17 goals all season, and arrive with a long unbeaten run hanging over them. That doesn’t mean Mechelen are there to be rolled over. Far from it. But it does mean they’ll need to be sharp, disciplined and a little bit ruthless if they want to take anything from this one.
The recent meeting in January was a 1-0 Union win, and the broader pattern between these two has often been tight. That matters here. You’d expect pressure, moments, and probably not a wide-open shootout.
KV Mechelen Form & Analysis
Mechelen come into this on the back of a decent enough point at KAA Gent, where they drew 1-1 away on 6 April. It was one of those away days where they had to keep their heads. They did just that, with Max Dean putting them ahead in the 15th minute before Bill Antonio came up with a late equaliser in stoppage time. That result snapped a two-game dip and at least steadied the mood a little after a rougher stretch.
Before that, though, the picture was mixed. They were beaten 4-1 at Club Brugge on 22 March, a result that exposed the gap between a decent mid-table side and one of the league’s heavy hitters. Before that loss came a tidy 1-0 home win over Anderlecht on 15 March, the kind of result that reminds everyone Mechelen can still land a punch at home. Then there was a 3-1 defeat at Gent on 8 March, a 2-1 home win over Zulte Waregem on 28 February, and a 2-0 away win at RAAL La Louvière on 22 February. That’s a fairly ordinary run on the page, but it also shows a team that keeps bouncing back. They’re not in the habit of folding after one setback.
At home, Mechelen’s numbers are solid without being flashy: 6 wins, 6 draws and 3 losses, with 19 goals scored and 16 conceded. That’s a decent return and, more importantly, it says they’ve been harder to beat on their own turf. They’ve only lost three times at home all season, and that’s the sort of platform that keeps them competitive in a league where the away side can often feel more comfortable with the ball. Still, the attacking output at home isn’t explosive. Nineteen goals in 15 matches is fine. It’s not enough to make anyone tremble. If they want to trouble Union, they’ll need one of those efficient nights where every chance matters.
There’s also a slight warning sign in the defensive numbers. Mechelen have scored in their last six, but they’ve also conceded in a few of the wrong places. Against a team like Union, that’s a risky habit. If they get stretched, the damage can come quickly. That won’t be easy to recover from.
Royale Union Saint-Gilloise Form & Analysis
Union’s form is exactly what you’d expect from a side sitting second and still sniffing the title race. They beat Sint-Truidense VV 1-0 at home on 4 April, with Guilherme Smith scoring in the 62nd minute from an assist by Anouar Ait El Hadj. It wasn’t glamorous. It didn’t need to be. They controlled the game, finished with more shots, kept Sint-Truiden off target, and just did the job. That’s what good teams do in this phase of the season.
Before that, they had a 3-1 away win at Sint-Truiden on 22 March, then a 2-0 home win over FCV Dender on 14 March, a 2-1 win against KRC Genk on 7 March, a 0-0 draw at KVC Westerlo on 1 March, and another 2-1 home win over Royal Antwerp on 21 February. So what have they actually been doing? Winning, mostly. They’ve won five of their last six, and they’re unbeaten in 13 league matches. That’s an excellent run by any standard. It’s not just about results either. They’ve been good at controlling matches, limiting opponents, and picking their moments.
The away record is impressive too, even if the raw line includes a few draws. Union’s league away split stands at 5 wins, 8 draws and 2 losses, with 18 goals scored and only 12 conceded. That defensive return on the road is excellent. They don’t need to blow teams away away from home; they’re perfectly happy to take the sting out of a match and let the pressure build on the other side. Can they keep that up here? The signs say yes. They’ve already shown they can handle awkward trips, and a 3-1 win at Sint-Truiden is a good reminder that they’re not just a cagey away side. They can punish you too.
There’s a clear identity here under David Hubert. Union don’t give much away, and they rarely lose their composure when a match becomes scrappy. Their season totals tell the story better than any slogan could: 51 goals scored, only 17 conceded. That’s elite stuff. The flip side? They’re not always rampant, and away draws have cropped up enough to stop this from looking like a procession. Still, they arrive with momentum, and that matters more than style points in a tight title run-in.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has tended to lean towards low margins. Union beat Mechelen 1-0 in January, and the game before that finished 1-1 in Mechelen in November. Go back a bit further and you find more of the same themes: a 1-0 Union win at home in December 2023, a 1-1 draw in November 2024, and a 1-0 Mechelen win in February 2025. Tight games. Not many frills.
There’s one especially strong pattern in the meetings between these sides: five of the last five have gone under 2.5 goals. That alone tells you to expect a cautious, attritional contest rather than a goal fest. That won’t shock anyone who’s watched Union away from home this season, or Mechelen when they’re up against a stronger opponent.
We Predict: Away Win
We’re backing Royale Union Saint-Gilloise at 4/6 for this one. It’s the cleaner play, and it feels justified by the shape of both teams’ seasons. Union are unbeaten in 13 league games, they’ve lost just twice in the whole campaign, and their defensive record is miles better than Mechelen’s. That gap matters. Mechelen are steady at home, but they’re not likely to dominate possession or chances against a side as organised as this.
The 1-2 correct score looks the right call. Mechelen should get something, especially with home advantage and their habit of finding a goal in these sorts of matches. But Union have the stronger habit, the stronger away platform, and the better knack for landing the decisive moment. If you wanted an alternative, under 2.5 goals is worth a look too. These meetings have been cagey for years, and this one should follow the same script.