Rot-Weiss Essen return to action on Saturday afternoon with a chance to tighten their grip on second place when they host FC Ingolstadt 04 in 3. Liga. Uwe Koschinat’s side have turned the back end of the season into a proper promotion push, while Sabrina Wittmann’s Ingolstadt arrive trying to steady a campaign that has drifted into mid-table comfort rather than anything more ambitious.
For Essen, this is exactly the sort of home game you’d want if you’re chasing the top spots. They’re well placed in 2nd with 61 points, and their home record has been one of the division’s best: 10 wins, four draws and only two defeats, with 33 goals scored and just 19 conceded. Ingolstadt sit 14th on 40 points. They’re safe enough, but not much more. That’s the blunt truth. A strong finish would still matter for pride, but the pressure is all on the hosts.
The route here has also been different. Essen have been flying, and their last month has felt like a team growing in confidence by the week. Ingolstadt, by contrast, have stumbled through a run of tight losses and one awkward home defeat after another. That contrast matters. So does the recent head-to-head record, because these two have played out some lively games in the past and Essen have had the upper hand more often than not.
Rot-Weiss Essen Form & Analysis
Rot-Weiss Essen are arriving in good shape and there’s no need to dress that up. Their last six matches have all been wins, and the pattern is simple enough: they’ve been scoring freely, riding moments of quality, and finding ways to control games even when things get a little messy. The 3-1 away win at 1. FC Schweinfurt 05 on 7 April was a neat continuation of that run. Dickson Abiama struck first, Torben Müsel added another before half-time, Marvin Obuz made sure of it late on, and even the own goal at the end didn’t spoil the mood. That’s seven unbeaten now, and they’ve won their last seven in all competitions. You don’t fluke that sort of rhythm.
Before that, Essen edged MSV Duisburg 1-0 at home, a more functional kind of win but still a huge one in a promotion race. Then came the 4-0 friendly thumping of VfL Bochum 1848, which won’t count for league points but did nothing to cool the feeling that this side are sharp going forward. In the league they’ve also beaten FC Viktoria Köln 2-1 away, Erzgebirge Aue 4-2 at home, and TSG Hoffenheim II U23 4-2 away. That’s a proper scoring run. They’re not just scraping through, they’re hitting opponents hard enough to make the margin feel fair.
The home numbers back it up. Essen’s 10-4-2 record at their own ground is serious, and 33 goals in 16 home matches is a healthy return. They’re averaging just over two goals per home game, which is the kind of output that gives a match like this a strong over-goals feel straight away. Defensively they’re not watertight — 19 conceded at home says there’s always a door slightly ajar — but the bigger story is that they keep outscoring problems. They’ve also shown a habit of striking first, which matters in a game where they’ll expect to control territory. If there’s a small concern, it’s that they can still be exposed when matches become open. That won’t scare them too much against Ingolstadt. It does mean they rarely get the luxury of a dead, sleepy contest.
Koschinat will like the balance. Essen are creating enough, scoring enough, and winning enough. The one thing they can’t afford here is complacency. Ingolstadt won’t arrive to admire the home side. They’ll have to be managed properly, because even in a strong run Essen have kept the door open at times. Still, this is a side playing with confidence and purpose. They look like a promotion contender. Plain and simple.
FC Ingolstadt 04 Form & Analysis
Ingolstadt’s recent form tells a much rougher story. Their last six have brought four defeats, one win and one draw, and the defeats have been the kind that sap momentum because they’ve been tight enough to sting. The 1-2 home loss to FC Viktoria Köln on 8 April came after they’d already lost 0-1 away at 1. FC Saarbrücken and 1-2 at home to Alemannia Aachen. That’s three straight league defeats, and there’s nothing flattering about that sequence. They did beat SSV Ulm 1846 3-1 away on 15 March, but that looks more like the exception than a turning point.
The most recent defeat to Viktoria Köln was especially flat. Ingolstadt led through Tobias Eisenhuth after 15 minutes and were level through David Otto soon after, but they didn’t really build on it and eventually lost 1-2. The xG line was also pretty anaemic at 0.37, which tells you how little control they had over the contest. That’s a worrying sign against a team like Essen, who punish loose spells and like to push games into the kind of pace that suits them. Ingolstadt don’t look like a side carrying much authority right now.
Away from home, though, there is at least a respectable base to work with. Ingolstadt’s away record is 5 wins, 5 draws and 6 defeats, with 28 scored and 22 conceded. That’s not disastrous at all. In fact, it suggests they’ve been more competitive on the road than their league position implies. They’ve also shown they can nick results away, as the win at SSV Ulm proved. But there’s a catch. They’ve only taken one point from their last three league games and they haven’t kept a clean sheet in a while. That makes life hard in a match where Essen are likely to ask repeated questions from the first whistle.
The other issue is balance. Ingolstadt can score, and 51 goals for across the league campaign isn’t poor, but they’re not convincing enough at the back to trust in a tight game. Their away concession rate is manageable on paper, yet when the pressure rises they’ve often been on the wrong side of narrow margins. This is a side that can compete for spells. Can they sustain it for 90 minutes at Essen? That’s a different question.
Head-to-Head
Essen have had the better of this fixture recently, and that matters here because it isn’t just one result, it’s a pattern. The most recent meeting ended 2-1 to Rot-Weiss Essen in Ingolstadt on 8 November 2025, and that followed a 2-0 Essen win in February 2025. Go back a little further and the teams drew 2-2 in Ingolstadt and 2-2 in Essen, while Essen also hammered Ingolstadt 4-0 in April 2024. The older meetings were more mixed, but the recent edge sits clearly with the home side.
There’s also been a goals trend running through this fixture. Four of the last five have gone over 2.5 goals, and five of the last seven have seen both teams score. That fits the shape of this match rather neatly. Essen usually find a way to get at Ingolstadt, and Ingolstadt have rarely managed to keep them quiet for long. No clean sheet in seven for Ingolstadt in this matchup says plenty.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/9 for this one. It’s short enough to look obvious, but the price still feels fair because both teams bring enough attacking threat to keep the scoreboard moving. Essen have been scoring for fun, while Ingolstadt’s away games aren’t exactly built around shutting things down. That combination is hard to ignore.
Essen’s home record points to goals, and so does their recent run of 4-2, 4-2 and 3-1 wins in the league. Ingolstadt have lost three on the spin, but they’ve still managed to score in two of those three defeats. Add in the recent head-to-head pattern — plenty of open games, plenty of chances, no real sign of caution — and this looks like a match where one goal should drag the other side into the contest. A 2-1 Rot-Weiss Essen win feels the likeliest scoreline, with the hosts having just enough edge to stay on the front foot.
If you want a different route, Rot-Weiss Essen to win and both teams to score has a decent shape to it. Essen are the stronger side by some distance, but Ingolstadt are capable of nicking one. That’s why the goals line remains the cleanest play.