PEC Zwolle host Excelsior in the VriendenLoterij Eredivisie on Sunday afternoon, 12 April 2026, with both clubs still fighting to put some breathing space between themselves and the wrong end of the table. Zwolle sit 13th on 33 points, while Excelsior are down in 15th with 27. That gap matters. It’s not huge, but it’s enough to give Henry van der Vegt’s side a little more freedom, especially at home, where they’ve been far more reliable than on the road.
For Excelsior and Ruben den Uil, this is the sort of fixture that can define a run-in. They’re not cut adrift, but they’re moving in the wrong direction. Seven league games without a win is a grim stretch, and every weekend that passes without three points turns the pressure up another notch. PEC Zwolle aren’t exactly flying, but they’ve at least shown a bit more resilience at their own ground. That makes this a tense one. Goals look likely, and so does a proper scrap.
Zwolle’s season has been a bit uneven, but their home form gives them a platform. They’ve won seven, drawn three and lost four at this ground, scoring 18 and conceding 17. That’s a solid return rather than a spectacular one, and it tells you they’re usually competitive in front of their own supporters. They’re not running away with games. They’re more the type to stay in it, nick a lead, and make you work for everything. That’s not nothing in a relegation battle.
PEC Zwolle Form & Analysis
Their recent results paint a mixed picture, though the pattern at home is better than the raw sequence suggests. PEC followed a 2-1 win over NAC Breda on 21 March with a goalless draw against Ajax, then another draw with Utrecht’s visit to a narrow 1-1 away at Sparta Rotterdam. They’ve been stubborn enough in patches, and there’s some steel in those draws. Still, the trip to Go Ahead Eagles on 5 April was a mess. A 5-0 loss can scar a week. Or two.
That defeat was ugly from the start. Zwolle conceded inside four minutes, were 3-0 down by the quarter-hour and never recovered. Their own numbers from that match tell a clear story: 16 shots, just one on target, and an xG of 1.42 that didn’t really match the flow of the game. They were open at the back and blunt when it mattered. That’s the danger with this side. They can create enough to stay relevant, but when the structure goes, it goes fast.
At home, though, Zwolle have usually been better at controlling the game. They’ve scored in most of their recent league matches, and they’ve only lost once in the last six league outings. There’s no long unbeaten surge to admire, but there is enough continuity to suggest they won’t be overawed here. The issue is the defensive record. Conceding 58 in 29 league matches is a heavy burden, and even at home they’ve had to live with a few too many uneasy moments. One clean sheet in the recent run. Not ideal. Not remotely ideal.
Still, this isn’t a side you’d dismiss. They’ve taken points from Ajax and Utrecht in the last month, and that matters. It says they can keep the ball moving and frustrate better opponents when they’re locked in. The question is whether that version turns up on Sunday afternoon. If it does, they should find enough chances against an away defence that’s been leaking goals all season.
Excelsior Form & Analysis
Excelsior arrive in worse shape and they know it. Their last six league matches have produced one draw and five defeats, with the only point coming in a 1-1 draw at Heracles Almelo on 20 March. The rest has been a slow slide. They lost 2-1 at Fortuna Sittard, went down 0-1 at home to Go Ahead Eagles, fell 1-2 at home to Heerenveen, were beaten 2-1 at Feyenoord, and then lost 0-2 to NEC Nijmegen at home on 4 April. That’s a bleak run. Seven without a win now. You don’t need much more than that to know the mood.
Their latest defeat against NEC was particularly telling. They weren’t outplayed to the point of embarrassment, but they still came up short in the key moments. Excelsior managed eight shots, four on target, and had two big chances, so there was enough there to at least threaten. They just didn’t take enough of those moments. That’s been a recurring theme. The back line is under pressure too often, and when the attack doesn’t land first, they’re left chasing matches they don’t really want to chase.
Away from home, the record is slightly less grim than the overall run, but only slightly. Excelsior have picked up just three wins on the road all season, alongside four draws and seven losses, with 15 scored and 28 conceded. That’s the sort of split that gets you into trouble. They do at least score away from home more often than at their own ground, which is one reason this total is so interesting, but the defensive numbers are poor and the clean sheets have dried up. They’ve gone seven league matches without one. That’s a long time in this division.
There’s a broader pattern here too. Excelsior often find themselves conceding first, and once that happens they’re chasing the game with limited margin for error. That’s a bad habit away from home, where control tends to slip quickly. Mind you, they did score at Feyenoord and at Heracles, so they’re not dead in the water in attacking terms. They can still cause problems. The issue is whether they can do enough in both boxes. Right now, the answer looks like no.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings between these two have been lively enough to leave an impression. Excelsior beat PEC Zwolle 2-1 in Rotterdam on 20 December 2025, but Zwolle have had their own moments in this pairing, winning 2-1 at home in April 2024 and 4-2 away the previous October. Go back a little further and the balance shifts again, with Zwolle also beating Excelsior 2-0 on a couple of occasions. There’s no long-term dominance either way. Just a run of games that usually brings chances.
What matters more is the shape of those contests. These teams have a habit of finding the net against each other, and clean sheets are hard to come by. Zwolle haven’t kept one in the last four head-to-head meetings, while Excelsior haven’t managed one in the last three. That fits the wider picture. When these sides meet, things tend to open up. It doesn’t always deliver wild scorelines, but it rarely feels cagey for long.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/13 here, and it looks a decent price for a match that should have enough attacking chaos to clear the line. PEC Zwolle have scored in most of their recent league fixtures and their home games usually carry a few chances. Excelsior, for all their misery, have still been involved in plenty of matches where both teams have found openings. The xG projection of 1.5 for Zwolle and 1.4 for Excelsior points the same way. That’s a fair amount of goal expectation for a game involving two sides battling for points rather than control.
A 2-1 PEC Zwolle win feels the cleanest read. Zwolle’s home edge should matter, but Excelsior are scrappy enough to land a goal of their own, especially given how often PEC have been exposed at the back. If you want a secondary angle, Both Teams to Score also has a strong case, but the total is the better fit here. This won’t be a dead tactical wrestling match. It should open up.