Tokyo Verdy host JEF United Chiba in the J1 League East on Saturday morning, 18 April 2026, with both sides already carrying a bit of baggage into this one. Verdy sit fourth on 15 points and have made a decent start to the campaign, but they’ve not found much rhythm over the last month. Chiba, down in 10th on nine points, are still trying to drag themselves clear of the lower half and a result here would do a lot more than just decorate the table. It would give their season some shape.
There’s also a fresh edge to the fixture. These two met only two weeks ago, with JEF United Chiba edging Tokyo Verdy 3-2 on 4 April. That’s the sort of result that lingers. Tokyo Verdy will want revenge on home soil, while Chiba know they’ve already shown they can hurt Hiroshi Jofuku’s side. The question is whether they can do it again away from home, because that’s been a very different story.
Tokyo Verdy’s home record is solid enough to keep belief high, but the wider form picture is messy. Chiba, for their part, arrive with a poor away record and a habit of conceding too much. That combination is why this feels like a tight game with goals, not a clean, controlled home win. There’s a draw or an away result lurking here.
Tokyo Verdy Form & Analysis
Tokyo Verdy’s recent run has been all over the place. They opened this stretch with a 0-0 home draw against FC Tokyo on 22 March, a match that told you a lot about their ceiling and their limits: hard to break down, but not sharp enough to take control. Then came a 0-2 home loss to Kawasaki Frontale on 18 March, which was a reality check, before they got back on track with a narrow 1-0 home win over Urawa Red Diamonds on 14 March. That looked like the sort of result that could spark a proper push.
It didn’t quite happen. Since then, Verdy have gone four games without a win. They lost 3-2 away to JEF United Chiba on 4 April, drew 1-1 at Urawa Red Diamonds on 12 April, and that’s where things stand now: one win, two draws and two defeats across the last five, with the only victory in that spell coming over a month ago. The away draw at Urawa did at least show some fight — Renji Hidano scored first in the 46th minute, then Itsuki Someno converted a penalty late on — but the numbers underneath were not flattering. They were outshot 16-7 and allowed three big chances. That wasn’t a dominant away display. Far from it.
At home, Tokyo Verdy are much more respectable. Their record at their own ground reads two wins, two draws and one defeat, with six goals scored and five conceded. That’s a proper mid-table foundation and, on paper, it should give them a platform here. Still, there’s a catch. They’ve scored just six home goals in five league matches. That’s not exactly intimidating. You’d expect them to compete, but you wouldn’t call them free-flowing. The defensive record is decent, yet the attack hasn’t shown enough bite to suggest they can just steamroll opponents. They’ve also gone through patches where one goal feels like a major job.
The wider issue for Jofuku’s side is consistency in both boxes. They can keep games close, but they don’t often kill them off. When they fall behind, they’ve got to work hard to chase. When they lead, they don’t always stay comfortable for long. That leaves them vulnerable against a team like Chiba, who may not be flying but can still punish sloppy moments.
JEF United Chiba Form & Analysis
JEF United Chiba arrive in slightly better mood after taking a point at home to Mito Hollyhock on 11 April, a 1-1 draw that at least stopped the rot. They were efficient enough without being sharp. Matheus Leiria put them in front in first-half stoppage time, and Takuya Yasui levelled it later on, but the match was fairly balanced overall. Chiba didn’t boss it. They just did enough to avoid another defeat, which matters after a run that had already turned shaky.
Before that, though, they beat Tokyo Verdy 3-2 on 4 April in the reverse fixture, and that result still stands out in this mini-run. It came after a 1-2 home loss to FC Tokyo and a 1-2 away defeat at Kashima Antlers, so the win over Verdy was a welcome lift rather than the start of a hot streak. If anything, Chiba’s recent form has been a patchwork of decent attacking spells and leaky defending. They can score, but they rarely look secure.
Their away form is the biggest red flag in this preview. Chiba’s league away record is poor: no wins, one draw and three defeats, with just three goals scored and seven conceded. That’s not the profile of a team you’d trust on the road. They’ve been competitive in pockets, but the results don’t lie. Away from home, they’ve struggled to control matches and they’ve often had to chase. Three goals in four away league games tells its own story. Not enough punch. Not enough control.
Still, Chiba aren’t coming here as pushovers. They’ve scored in enough games to keep this live, and they’ve already shown they can trouble Tokyo Verdy’s defence. The 3-2 win two weeks ago wasn’t a smash-and-grab. It was earned. And if Yoshiyuki Kobayashi’s side can recreate even part of that attacking rhythm, they’ll fancy taking something again. The flip side? Their away record is ugly, and that makes them hard to back with complete confidence. You can see why they’re priced as the underdog. You can also see why they’re dangerous.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings between these sides have been lively and, more often than not, productive. The latest clash on 4 April ended JEF United Chiba 3-2 Tokyo Verdy, while the meeting before that in late 2023 saw Verdy edge it 2-1 at home. Go back a little further and you find more of the same: Tokyo Verdy won 3-2 in October 2023, Chiba won 1-0 in April 2023, and there was a 3-1 Chiba victory in June 2022. These games haven’t been cagey. They’ve been open and a bit wild.
That pattern matters here. Six of the last seven meetings have seen both teams score, and these sides seem to find it difficult to keep each other out for long. Tokyo Verdy haven’t kept a clean sheet in seven straight head-to-head meetings, while Chiba have gone three without one in this fixture. That’s not a one-off. It’s a recurring trend, and it points strongly towards another match where both attacks get chances.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 8/13 looks the strongest play here. Chiba’s away record is poor, no question, but they’ve already beaten Tokyo Verdy once this month and the matchup looks awkward for the home side. Verdy have only won one of their last five league games, while Chiba’s attack has been lively enough to keep them in the conversation even when the results haven’t gone their way.
There’s also the simple fact that Tokyo Verdy haven’t been convincing enough at home to justify short odds. Six goals in five league matches at their own ground isn’t a power-house return. Chiba have scored in enough recent games, and the 3-2 reverse fixture showed they can get at this defence. A 1-2 away win feels a fair call on the scoreline, with the cover coming from the draw as much as the outright upset. If you want a narrower angle, Both Teams to Score also has plenty of appeal, but X2 is the safer route.