KV Mechelen host RSC Anderlecht on Saturday evening in the Pro League Championship Round, and there’s plenty riding on it for both sides. Mechelen sit sixth on 24 points, just behind Anderlecht in fourth on 25, so this is one of those late-season meetings where the table can still wobble in a hurry. It’s not about a title push any more, but it is about finishing the campaign with something solid to show for it — European places, pride, and the chance to climb past a direct rival.
The first meeting between these two in 2026 went Mechelen’s way, too. Frederik Vanderbiest’s side nicked a 1-0 win at Anderlecht on 15 March, a result that will still be fresh in both camps. That said, the return fixture arrives with different momentum around it. Mechelen have gone a little flat. Anderlecht have just found a bit of spark again. And in a game where both teams have had defensive issues all season, goals feel more likely than caution.
KV Mechelen Form & Analysis
Mechelen’s recent story has been one of small highs, then sharp drops. They beat Anderlecht away on 15 March and followed that with a pretty brutal 4-1 defeat at Club Brugge a week later. Then came a 1-1 draw at Gent, which was respectable enough, before the Championship Round began with a tight home loss to Union Saint-Gilloise. That 0-1 defeat last Sunday was a frustrating one, because Mechelen barely laid a glove on them. Four shots. No effort on target. When you’re at home and still don’t trouble the keeper once, the warning lights are flashing.
The broader picture is mixed but not hopeless. Mechelen have 12 wins, 10 draws and 10 defeats overall, with 40 scored and 39 conceded. That kind of balance tells you a lot about the team Frederik Vanderbiest has built: competitive, but rarely comfortable. Their home record is slightly better than the overall table suggests, with six wins, six draws and four losses at this ground, and 19 goals scored to 17 conceded. So they’re not easy to beat in front of their own crowd. Still, they’ve only scored one goal per home game on average, and that limits their margin for error. One bad half and they’re in trouble.
There’s also a nagging sense that Mechelen are being dragged into matches they don’t fully control. Against Gent away they found a way to stay in it and take a point. Against Union at home they were overrun. Against Anderlecht in mid-March they were compact, stubborn and just about clinical enough. Can they pull that off twice in a row against the same opponent? That’s the question. Their home numbers say they can hang around. Their latest performances say they’ll need to defend a lot better than they did last time out.
RSC Anderlecht Form & Analysis
Anderlecht arrive with a bit more punch in their step after a 3-1 home win over Gent on 12 April. It wasn’t flawless — far from it — but it was lively, aggressive and full of late conviction. Wilfried Kanga scored from the spot, Yari Verschaeren added one in the 79th minute, and then Tristan Degreef and Adriano Bertaccini piled on even more pain deep into stoppage time. That sort of finish matters. It tells you a side still believes it can turn a decent outing into a convincing one when the game opens up.
Before that, though, the road was rough. Anderlecht lost 4-2 at Club Brugge on 6 April after being pulled into a wild, open contest they couldn’t control. They had also lost at home to Cercle Brugge and away at Mechelen, so the Gent win was a timely reset rather than proof they’ve solved everything. Their six-match run reads like a rollercoaster: a big home win over OH Leuven, then a draw at Club Brugge, then three defeats in four before Gent. That isn’t the form of a side in total control. It is the form of a side that can score, can be scored against, and tends to live on the edge.
The away numbers back that up. Anderlecht’s road record is only 4 wins, 4 draws and 8 defeats, with 20 goals scored and a hefty 29 conceded. That’s the part of their profile Mechelen will fancy. They’re far more vulnerable on their travels than at home, and they don’t keep many clean sheets away from Brussels. Still, they’re dangerous enough going forward to hurt teams that leave space. With 48 goals scored overall, they’ve got more firepower than Mechelen, and that can change a game quickly. The issue is whether they can keep things tidy at the other end. Usually, they don’t.
Still, the Championship Round often rewards the team that can live through the messy parts. Anderlecht have scored in enough difficult away games to suggest they won’t go quietly here. They’ve also been part of plenty of matches with open scorelines, and if Mechelen push too high after a decent spell, that’s exactly the kind of invitation Anderlecht tend to accept.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings between these two have produced plenty of drama and, more often than not, goals. Mechelen’s 1-0 win at Anderlecht on 15 March broke a run of dominant-looking results from the Brussels side, but it didn’t erase the pattern around the fixture. Before that, Anderlecht had beaten Mechelen 3-1 at home in November 2025 and 4-1 in January 2025. They also won 3-1 at Mechelen in August 2024.
The longer trend is clear enough. This pairing usually produces chances at both ends, and the home side hasn’t had things all its own way for long stretches. Seven of the last eight meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and that’s hard to ignore. One narrow Mechelen win doesn’t suddenly change the personality of the fixture. Not with these two.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/13 here, and it feels like the right call for a game that has goals written all over it. Mechelen have scored in enough home matches to trust them to find something, and Anderlecht’s away record is too loose to expect a clean sheet. On the other side, Anderlecht have the better attacking numbers overall and just put three past Gent. They should get on the board.
The 1-2 correct-score angle fits the shape of it neatly. Mechelen are usually competitive at home, but Anderlecht carry a bit more quality in the final third and look more likely to nick the bigger moments. The tension is obvious: Mechelen beat Anderlecht away only a few weeks ago. But that result came in a tighter, less open game. This one feels different. If you want a second angle, Over 2.5 Goals is live as well, especially with both teams’ recent defensive records and that strong head-to-head scoring trend.