Le Mans host Clermont Foot at the Stade Marie-Marvingt on Friday evening, 17 April 2026, in a Ligue 2 meeting that matters for very different reasons at both ends of the table. Patrick Videira’s side are chasing promotion momentum from third place and every home point is gold now, while Grégory Proment’s Clermont are trying to drag themselves clear of the lower reaches after a rough season that’s left them down in 14th.
For Le Mans, this is about keeping the pressure on the sides above them and protecting a very strong position in the automatic-promotion race. They’ve spent most of the campaign looking like a proper contender, and their home record is one of the best in the division. Clermont, by contrast, are still in that awkward middle ground where the table doesn’t quite threaten them with immediate danger, but the form is too patchy to feel comfortable. A result here would settle nerves. A defeat would just underline how uneven this season has been.
The backdrop is pretty simple. Le Mans have been the more reliable team, the better side at home, and the cleaner side defensively. Clermont arrive with a few lively attacking moments in recent weeks, but they’ve won only once in their last six league matches and haven’t kept opponents quiet enough to trust them against one of Ligue 2’s strongest home outfits. That’s the heart of it. One side is pushing up. The other is trying not to slip further.
Le Mans Form & Analysis
Le Mans come into this one on the back of a goalless draw away to US Boulogne Côte-d’Opale, and while 0-0 rarely gets pulses racing, it was another sign that Videira’s team know how to manage ugly away days. Before that, they blew Pau FC away 4-0 at home, a result that summed up what Le Mans can do when they get on the front foot. They’ve also gone to Amiens and won 4-3 in a wild game, and earlier in March they beat Nancy 4-2 away from home before brushing Annecy FC aside 3-0 on their own pitch. That’s a serious run. They’ve picked up points in seven straight league games and lost just once in their last 14. That’s promotion-level consistency.
The home record is where Le Mans really separate themselves. They’ve won eight, drawn five and lost only two league matches at home, scoring 18 and conceding just seven. Seven goals conceded at home all season is tiny. That tells you everything about the control they’ve been able to exert in front of their own crowd. They don’t just nick games there. They shut them down. It’s a proper base to build from, and in a league as tight as Ligue 2, that’s usually what keeps you near the top.
There’s a nice balance to their attack too. Le Mans have scored 45 league goals overall, and the recent pattern suggests they’re capable of winning in different ways. They can batter weaker opponents, as Pau found out. They can survive a shootout, as Amiens did. And when they need to, they can keep things tight and settle for a draw. The only small caveat is that their last two games have both finished without a win, so the flow isn’t quite as relentless as it was earlier in the month. Still, that feels more like a pause than a warning light.
Clermont Foot Form & Analysis
Clermont’s recent story is a lot messier. Their latest outing was a 2-2 draw at home to Nancy, and it carried the same familiar frustration they’ve had for much of the spring: enough attacking life to stay in games, not enough control to finish them off. Before that, they drew 2-2 away at Grenoble Foot 38, which at least extended their unbeaten away run to two, but the broader picture is bleaker. They lost 1-0 at home to Red Star FC, then 1-0 again at home to Pau FC, and before that fell 2-1 away to Troyes. A 2-1 home win over USL Dunkerque on 27 February now feels like a distant memory. Clermont are five league matches without a win. That’s not the sort of run that inspires much confidence heading into a trip like this.
Their away numbers are the part that really matter here, because they’ve been too soft on the road. Clermont’s away record stands at three wins, four draws and eight defeats, with 17 goals scored and 24 conceded. Those aren’t disastrous totals, but they’re nowhere near good enough for a side visiting the division’s third-placed team. They’ve lost more away matches than they’ve won at home, which says plenty about how difficult they’ve found life outside their own ground. Can they stay compact enough to frustrate Le Mans? That’s the big question. The answer, based on recent evidence, doesn’t look especially encouraging.
There are flashes in their attack. The recent 2-2 with Nancy showed that they can still find a way through, with Brandon Bokangu scoring twice and Ivan M’Bahia and Ilhan Fakili both adding their names to the action. But turning those bursts into wins is the problem. Clermont have gone too many games without getting the decisive goal, and their defending has left them chasing matches. They’ve conceded 41 in the league overall and, away from home, they rarely keep the door shut for long enough. Against a Le Mans side that’s strong early and even stronger at home, that’s a bad combination.
Head-to-Head
The recent head-to-head record leans slightly towards a tight, cautious game, and that fits the broader feel of this fixture. The most recent meeting finished 1-1 in Clermont in September 2025, and that followed a similar pattern to several earlier clashes: little between them, not much room, and no huge gaps in quality. Clermont did beat Le Mans 2-0 in 2011, but Le Mans have also won 1-0 away in 2019 and 3-1 at home in 2012. This isn’t a rivalry packed with wild scorelines.
One angle does stand out. Le Mans have gone five meetings with Clermont without losing, and four of the last five head-to-heads have seen both teams score. That creates a slightly awkward mix for the betting market. The historical trend says Le Mans usually avoid defeat. The scoring trend says Clermont often find a way to nick one. Put those together and a home win with both sides on the scoresheet starts to look the neatest read.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Le Mans to win this at 4/6. It’s a fair price for a team that’s third in the table, excellent at home and unbeaten in seven league matches. Clermont’s away form simply doesn’t stack up well enough against that. They’ve picked up only 13 away points all season, and even their recent draw at Grenoble felt more like a salvage job than a sign of real momentum. Le Mans, by contrast, have been ruthless on their own patch, conceding only seven home goals all year. That edge should tell.
A 2-1 home win feels about right. Le Mans have enough attacking quality to get ahead, but Clermont have shown enough recent life in front of goal to make a clean sheet far from certain. That’s why the home win appeals more than a shutout-based angle. If you wanted a slight side bet, Le Mans to score over 1.5 goals has plenty going for it too, though the straight home win is the stronger call.