TSV Havelse host 1. FC Saarbrücken in the 3. Liga on Saturday afternoon, 11 April 2026, with both sides still trying to steady their seasons in the closing stretch. For Havelse, sitting 18th on 26 points, this is about survival, plain and simple. Every week carries a little more weight now. Saarbrücken arrive two places higher in 16th, but they’re hardly cruising either. With 37 points, they’re not safe enough to relax and not consistent enough to talk confidently about comfort.
There’s also a familiar feel to this one. These clubs have already drawn once this season, and Saarbrücken have made a habit of avoiding defeat in the matchup. That won’t mean much on its own, though. What matters more is the shape both teams are in right now, and the shape is messy. Havelse have been producing high-scoring games almost without fail. Saarbrücken, meanwhile, have been stuck in a strange middle ground — hard to beat in patches, but not sharp enough to pull clear of trouble.
The table tells you why the tension is real. Havelse have conceded 73 goals in 32 league games, which is a heavy burden for any side. Saarbrücken’s numbers are less alarming, but they’ve still scored only 42 and let in 47. Neither team looks built for calm, controlled football at the moment. That usually points towards goals, and probably a match with more swings than structure.
TSV Havelse Form & Analysis
Havelse come into this off one of their better afternoons of the season, even if it was a strange one on the road. They went to SV Wehen Wiesbaden on 8 April and came away with a 4-1 win, and that matters because it broke a poor run and reminded everyone they can still hurt teams going forward. Before that, though, the picture was bleak. Energie Cottbus beat them 3-0 at home on 4 April, SSV Jahn Regensburg won 5-2 in a wild away game on 21 March, and FC Viktoria Köln were beaten 3-2 in Havelse’s favour on 14 March. Sandwiched around that were defeats to Waldhof Mannheim and Hansa Rostock. It’s been a lot of chaos, very little control.
That’s been the story for weeks. Havelse don’t tend to do dull. They’ve scored in bursts, but they’ve also given opponents far too much room. Their home record says plenty: four wins, four draws and eight defeats at their own ground, with 23 scored and 35 conceded. That’s not the profile of a team protecting home turf. It’s the profile of a side that gets dragged into open games and usually comes out the wrong side of them. The good news is they rarely blank for long. The bad news? They almost never keep the back door shut.
The striking thing here is just how often Havelse’s matches spill over. They’ve gone over 2.5 goals in six straight league games, and they’ve conceded in 12 home matches on the bounce. Those two trends fit together neatly. You can see the problem immediately: even when they score, they rarely control the game afterwards. Samir Ferchichi will know that’s the issue. Score first, and they still don’t look secure. Go behind, and it usually turns into a chase.
1. FC Saarbrücken Form & Analysis
Saarbrücken arrive with a mixed bag of recent results and just enough resilience to avoid panic. Their last six have brought wins over FC Ingolstadt 04 and SV Wehen Wiesbaden, draws with Alemannia Aachen and Jahn Regensburg, and defeats to SC Verl and MSV Duisburg. That’s a patchwork rather than a run. Still, they’ve only lost once in their last three, and the 1-1 draw with Aachen on 8 April came after they’d edged Ingolstadt 1-0 three days earlier. There’s at least a bit of stability there, even if it’s not especially convincing.
The away record is where the concern starts. Saarbrücken’s league form on the road has been poor: one win, seven draws and eight defeats, with only 16 goals scored and 29 conceded. One win away from home all season is a serious warning sign. It means they don’t travel with much authority, and it also explains why so many of their away games drift into stalemates or narrow losses. Argirios Giannikis’ side have been difficult to put away in some periods, but that hasn’t translated into enough victories. Too many matches end with them hanging around, not finishing the job.
Their recent draw with Aachen summed that up. They scored through Jonas Oehmichen in the first half, then lost Kaan Caliskaner to a second yellow before conceding late. That kind of game tells you plenty. Saarbrücken can compete, they can create enough to score, but they’re not clean enough defensively and not ruthless enough when chances come. Away from home, that’s a bad mix. Mind you, they’ve still avoided defeat in three straight against Havelse. That won’t scare anyone on its own, but it does tell you they’re comfortable enough in this fixture to keep it open.
Head-to-Head
These sides have met three times in the recent record available, and Saarbrücken haven’t lost any of them. They beat Havelse 1-0 in July 2021, then drew 2-2 in December 2021, and shared a 1-1 draw in Saarbrücken in November 2025. So the pattern is fairly clear: Saarbrücken have had the edge, but not enough to dominate. Havelse have usually found a way to stay alive in the contest, even if they haven’t turned that into a win.
That 1-1 draw in November fits the broader picture here. Saarbrücken rarely run away with this pairing, and Havelse have at least shown they can trouble them. Still, the visitors have gone three head-to-head games without defeat, and that gives them a small psychological edge. Small being the key word.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 1/2 for this one. It’s a short price, sure, but it’s short for a reason. Havelse’s matches have been a goal factory lately — six league games in a row have gone beyond 2.5 — and their home record is full of holes. Saarbrücken aren’t exactly a defensive rock on the road either, with 29 conceded in 18 away matches. That’s enough to expect chances at both ends.
The projected xG line also points in the same direction, with Havelse at 1.7 and Saarbrücken at 1.9. That’s a proper attacking forecast, not a cagey one. A 1-2 Saarbrücken win fits the shape of the game, but 2-2 wouldn’t shock anyone either. The safer read is that both sides should contribute to the scoring, and once the first goal goes in, this one could open up quickly.
If you want a slightly more aggressive angle, Both Teams to Score is an obvious alternative. Still, Over 2.5 Goals is the cleaner play. Neither defence has earned much trust, and neither side has shown the discipline to keep this sort of match locked down for 90 minutes.