SV Wehen Wiesbaden host SV Waldhof Mannheim in the 3. Liga on Sunday evening, and it’s the kind of late-season meeting that sits just below the headline-chasers but still carries real weight. Neither side is in freefall, but neither is in any sort of comfort zone either. Wehen are 9th on 48 points, Waldhof are 11th on 47. One point separates them. That’s slim enough to sharpen the mood without quite turning it into a panic job.
There’s no trophy on the line here, but there is pride, momentum and the small matter of finishing as high as possible in a tight mid-table pack. For Daniel Scherning’s Wehen, this is a chance to steady a wobble and make home advantage count. For Luc Holtz’s Waldhof, it’s about stopping a run of one step forward, one step back. Both teams have enough attacking punch to make this a lively watch. Both also have enough defensive flaws to spoil the clean-sheet dream. That’s where the value looks to lie.
The wider numbers point the same way. Wehen have been strong at their own ground this season, while Mannheim’s away record is distinctly patchy. Add in the recent head-to-head trend — this fixture has usually produced goals at one end or both — and you don’t need to squint too hard to see why BTTS is drawing attention.
SV Wehen Wiesbaden Form & Analysis
Wehen arrive at this one carrying a mixed bag of recent results, and the story isn’t especially flattering. Their last league outing was a 2-1 defeat away to FC Viktoria Köln on 11 April, a match that looked manageable enough on paper but slipped away after Frank Ronstadt’s red card changed the tone. Before that came a damaging 1-4 home loss to TSV Havelse on 8 April, which stung because home turf has been the one place where Wehen have generally looked reliable. Go back a little further and there was a 3-0 defeat at Alemannia Aachen, a 0-1 home loss to Hansa Rostock, and a flat 0-0 draw away at 1860 München. That’s three losses in a row in the league, and it’s not the sort of sequence that leaves a side brimming with confidence.
The home record is still the main reason they’re sitting above Waldhof, though. Ten wins, one draw and five defeats at this ground is a strong return by 3. Liga standards, and 32 goals scored in those 16 home matches is nothing to sniff at. They’ve also kept the goals against down to 20 at home, which gives them a better defensive profile in front of their own crowd than their overall season figures suggest. That matters here. It’s a ground where they’ve usually found a way to play on the front foot. You’d expect them to do that again.
Still, there’s a wrinkle. Wehen haven’t been especially watertight in recent weeks, and the latest results point to a team that can be opened up when the tempo rises. They’ve lost three straight league games, and the goals against have crept up at awkward moments. The xG numbers from the Viktoria Köln defeat were decent enough — 1.19 created, 1.43 conceded — but the finishing was blunt and the discipline broke down. The blunt truth? They’re still more dangerous at home than away, but they’re not exactly controlling matches right now. That keeps this from being straightforward.
SV Waldhof Mannheim Form & Analysis
Waldhof’s recent run has the same jagged feel, just with a bit more scoring embedded in it. Their last league match ended in a 1-4 home defeat to MSV Duisburg on 11 April, and that was a bruising one. They actually posted respectable attacking numbers in that game — 19 shots, eight on target, 2.04 xG — but they were far too open when Duisburg broke through them. Before that, there was a 1-1 draw at home to Hoffenheim II and another 1-1 at 1860 München. That pair of draws tells its own story: competitive, but not ruthless. Earlier still, they beat Erzgebirge Aue 2-1 at home, lost 4-1 away to Osnabrück, and beat TSV Havelse 3-1. There are goals in there, plenty of them, but very little control.
Away from home, Mannheim’s record is the shakier one. Five wins, two draws and nine defeats on the road is mid-table form at best, and 22 scored versus 32 conceded away from home tells you they’ve been stretched. They can score away — that much is clear — but they’re rarely secure enough to turn one goal into three points with any certainty. Their last three away league games have brought a draw at 1860 München, a heavy loss at Osnabrück, and the sort of open, end-to-end football that tends to suit neither defence nor betting caution. That’s the flip side. They’re lively, but they’re vulnerable.
Luc Holtz will want more protection from his back line, because Waldhof have developed a frustrating habit of giving opponents a route back into games. They’ve failed to keep a clean sheet in a long stretch now, and the broader away numbers only reinforce that. On the plus side, they’ve still got enough attacking threat to trouble anyone in this division, and the likes of their 4-1 away defeat at Osnabrück came in a game where they didn’t go missing entirely. They can score. They can also concede in clusters. That’s the profile here, and it points squarely towards a game with chances at both ends.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has had a fairly clear pattern over the last few meetings: no one tends to dominate for long, and the goals often come in bunches. Waldhof edged the most recent meeting 1-0 in Mannheim on 22 November 2025, but before that the sides shared a 2-2 in Wiesbaden in April 2025, then another 2-2 in Mannheim in October 2024. Go a little further back and Wehen won 3-0 in March 2023 and 2-0 in a friendly at the end of 2022, which shows they can get the better of this opponent when the game suits them.
The key point, though, is that recent meetings haven’t been cagey. One side rarely shuts the other out for long. Wehen have gone three head-to-heads without a clean sheet, and that fits the broader feel of the matchup: one goal opens the door, then the game tends to breathe.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re taking Both Teams To Score at 8/15 here, and it looks a perfectly fair price for a game with this shape. Wehen are strong at home but not fully locked in at the back, while Waldhof travel with enough attacking threat to nick a goal even when the evening turns messy. The away side’s defensive record on the road is the real giveaway. They’ve been giving up chances, and Wehen’s home scoring numbers are good enough to punish that.
The projected xG line also leans into a goal at each end, with Wehen set around 1.5 and Waldhof around 1.3. That’s not the profile of a tame 1-0 either way. A 2-1 home win feels the most natural scoreline, with Wehen’s home edge just about edging a game that should stay open for long spells. If you want a slightly bolder angle, over 2.5 goals is live too, but BTTS is the cleaner call. This one should have at least two answers.