Montpellier welcome Grenoble Foot 38 to Ligue 2 action on Friday evening, 17 April 2026, with both clubs still chasing something meaningful from the closing stretch of the season. Montpellier sit 7th on 44 points and remain in the mix for the upper half, while Grenoble are down in 13th on 32 points and need a strong finish just to steady a campaign that’s been far too draw-heavy and too often flat away from home.
For Montpellier, this is about keeping pressure on the teams above them and turning a solid home base into a late push. For Grenoble, the picture is simpler and a bit grim: they need a response, they need points, and they need them quickly. Franck Rizzetto’s side have gone nine league matches without a win, and that kind of run has a nasty habit of draining the life out of a season. Zoumana Camara’s Montpellier haven’t been spectacular either, but they’ve been the more reliable side. That matters.
There’s also a stylistic angle here. Montpellier’s home record is decent, Grenoble’s away record is poor, and the recent scoring trends point toward a match that may not open up early. You wouldn’t expect a goal-fest. You’d expect tension, scrapping, and one side being forced to take the initiative whether they like it or not.
Montpellier Form & Analysis
Montpellier arrive here without a defeat in six, and that alone gives them a firmer footing than most teams in the division. The sequence has been a strange one, though. They went to Annecy on 10 April and came away with a 0-0 draw, then hosted Troyes a week earlier and had to settle for 2-2 after letting the game breathe too much. Before that, they drew 0-0 at Pau, beat Stade Lavallois 2-0 at home, won 3-0 away at Nancy, and shared another goalless draw with Stade de Reims. It’s a mixed bag, but the pattern is clear enough: Montpellier are difficult to beat, and they’ve been especially awkward for opponents when the game stays tight.
That unbeaten run has substance, but it’s not all clean and tidy. Three of their last six have finished level, and the two most recent home games have been different versions of the same story: control without full command. Troyes scored twice in a 2-2 draw at Montpellier, while Stade Lavallois were put away more comfortably, 2-0. The home record overall is encouraging enough for a side in 7th: seven wins, four draws and four defeats at their own ground, with 24 scored and 17 conceded. Those are respectable numbers. Not elite, but strong enough to support a push for three points against weaker travelling opposition.
The defensive side is what catches the eye first. Montpellier have only 27 goals conceded in the league all season, and at home they’ve allowed just 17 in 15 matches. That’s the sort of base that usually keeps a team in the top half. The flip side? They’re not exactly explosive. Their home scoring average is fine rather than frightening, and in recent weeks they’ve leaned more on control and restraint than on rampant attacking football. Since their last loss, they’ve stayed unbeaten for six games. Since their last win, though, they’ve gone three without one. That’s the tension here. They’re hard to beat, but they haven’t been putting teams away with any real regularity.
Grenoble Foot 38 Form & Analysis
Grenoble’s recent form reads like a team stuck in second gear. They drew 1-1 at Guingamp on 10 April, having actually asked a few questions in the final third despite being outshot heavily, and that came after a 2-2 home draw with Clermont Foot. Before that, they were beaten 3-2 away at Stade Lavallois, held Saint-Étienne to a 0-0 draw at home, lost 1-0 away at Rodez, and drew 0-0 with US Boulogne at home. That’s nine league games without a win now. Nine. It’s the kind of run that tells you a team can stay in matches without ever really controlling them.
The away form is even harder to dress up. Grenoble are 17th in the away table with just 11 points from 15 matches, having won only twice on the road, drawn five and lost eight. They’ve scored 17 away goals and conceded 23, which is not disastrous by relegation-chase standards but still plainly below what you’d want from a side trying to impose itself. They can nick a goal — that much is true — but they’ve also spent too much of the season chasing games from behind or hanging on in them. Can they keep that up against a better home side? Probably not.
There are some awkwardly positive signs if you squint. They’ve scored in both of their last two matches, including the 1-1 draw at Guingamp and the 2-2 home draw with Clermont. That at least suggests a little life in the attack. But the defensive record is still a problem. Grenoble have conceded 36 league goals overall, and the recent pattern isn’t convincing: they’ve now gone three matches without a clean sheet, and in away games they’ve been vulnerable enough to let matches drift away from them. The 6-22 shot count at Guingamp tells its own story. They were under pressure for long spells and, frankly, probably won’t enjoy repeating that sort of afternoon in Montpellier.
Head-to-Head
The recent meeting between these sides finished 1-1 in Grenoble on 13 December 2025, so there’s at least a bit of evidence that Grenoble can make this awkward. Montpellier, though, have avoided defeat in the last four meetings between the clubs, and that gives them a small but useful psychological edge.
There’s a faint historical pattern too, with the sides trading tight, competitive games rather than dramatic blowouts. Montpellier beat Grenoble 1-0 in Ligue 1 back in February 2010, while Grenoble edged a Coupe de France meeting 3-2 a month earlier. That’s ancient history, of course, but the more recent draw fits the mood here better. This isn’t a fixture that usually throws up chaos. It tends to stay compact.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Montpellier to win at 8/11 here. It’s not a flashy price, but it’s the right one. Montpellier are the stronger side, they’re the better home team, and they’ve got the more reliable defensive shape. Grenoble’s away record is poor enough on its own, and the nine-match winless run doesn’t exactly shout confidence.
The 2-1 correct score appeals most. Montpellier should have enough to edge it, but they’ve only kept one clean sheet in recent home games and Grenoble have at least found the net in their last two. That leaves room for the visitors to make a nuisance of themselves before the stronger side gets over the line. If you want a lower-risk angle, Montpellier to win and under 4.5 goals looks perfectly reasonable. This shouldn’t run wild.