Urawa Red Diamonds host Tokyo Verdy in J1 League East action on Sunday morning, 12 April 2026, with both clubs looking to turn decent early-season positions into something sturdier. Urawa sit seventh on 11 points, just two behind Verdy in fifth, so there’s real weight to this one. It’s not a title decider in April, but it does matter. A lot. One side can tighten its grip on the top half, the other can move ahead of a direct rival and keep the pressure on the early frontrunners.
There’s a bit of history hanging over it too. Tokyo Verdy edged the meeting between the sides 1-0 on 14 March, and that result still stings for Urawa because it came at a time when Maciej Skorza’s team were already searching for rhythm. Since then, neither club has gone on a clean run. Both have been dragged into scrappy, uneven weeks. The question is simple enough: who settles first?
Urawa have the crowd, the stronger home profile on paper, and the need for revenge. Verdy arrive with a marginally better league position, but their away record is shaky and they’ve been giving away too much. There’s a narrow feel to this fixture. Don’t expect fireworks.
Urawa Red Diamonds Form & Analysis
Urawa’s last few weeks have been messy, and the pattern is hard to ignore. They opened with a 3-2 defeat away at Kawasaki Frontale on 5 April, a match that had goals, momentum swings and late drama, but no points. Before that came a 2-1 home loss to Machida Zelvia on 22 March, which followed a 1-1 draw with Kashiwa Reysol at home. That draw felt like a missed chance rather than a rescue. The one clear bright spot in the run came on 7 March, when they beat Mito Hollyhock 2-0 at home. Since then? Four matches without a win. That’s the story.
The recent sequence also says something else about Urawa: they’re not getting dominated, but they’re not controlling games either. At Kawasaki, they produced 1.30 xG and conceded 1.13, with both sides landing three shots on target and Urawa even creating three big chances. That should’ve been enough to nick something. It wasn’t. They’ve got punch going forward — 13 goals in nine league matches is respectable — but the balance isn’t right. Six scored and six conceded at home tells you the same thing in a smaller sample. The home record stands at one win, one draw and two defeats. Stable? Not really. Dangerous? Yes. Reliable? Not yet.
Still, there’s enough in Urawa’s profile to think they’ll get chances here. They’ve scored in most of their recent matches and, across the season, they’re averaging enough territory to stay on the front foot for spells. The problem is that they keep leaving the door open. Four matches without a clean sheet is the glaring number. You can’t keep inviting pressure and expect it to disappear. Not in a league this tight.
Tokyo Verdy Form & Analysis
Tokyo Verdy’s form has been just as uneven, only with a slightly different flavour. Their latest outing was a 3-2 loss away to JEF United Chiba on 4 April, a game that swung around alarmingly. Verdy were involved in a proper shootout, but they still came away empty-handed. Before that, they drew 0-0 at home with FC Tokyo, a result that probably felt underwhelming after the earlier promise of the season. Then came a 2-0 home defeat to Kawasaki Frontale. Before all that, they had the best result of the lot: a 1-0 home win over Urawa Red Diamonds on 14 March. Since that night, they’ve gone three games without a win.
Verdy’s away form is where the warning lights flash brightest. They’ve taken just one win from four away league matches, with three defeats and no draws, and they’ve shipped nine goals on the road. That’s not the platform of a side you’d trust to manage a tricky away day. They’ve scored six away from home, so they’re not completely toothless, but the defensive side keeps undoing them. The 3-2 loss at Yokohama F. Marinos on 28 February, the 2-0 defeat at Kashima Antlers on 7 March, and then that latest reverse at JEF all fit the same pattern. They can be open. Very open.
The numbers at both ends of the season snapshot are a bit split. Verdy are fifth in the table and have 13 goals scored overall, which keeps them relevant. Yet they’ve also conceded 14, more than Urawa, and that’s the sort of thing that tends to bite when they leave home. Their 0-0 draw with FC Tokyo showed they can sit in, keep shape and frustrate, but it also showed they don’t always have the cutting edge to turn control into a win. Away from home, they’re not nearly solid enough to inspire confidence.
Head-to-Head
These two have already met once this season, and Tokyo Verdy won it 1-0 on 14 March. That result matters. It gives Verdy the psychological edge and it told Urawa exactly how awkward this opponent can be when the game gets tight and stretched in the wrong way.
The broader head-to-head picture leans towards a low-scoring contest. Urawa beat Verdy 2-0 in May 2025, but there was also a 0-0 draw in September 2025 and a 1-1 draw in March 2024. Even the recent meetings have had a restrained feel. These matches haven’t been wild affairs. They’ve tended to stay close, tense and short on space.
We Predict: BTTS - No
We’re backing BTTS - No at 4/6 for this one. It’s a sensible angle given how both sides are shaping up. Urawa’s home numbers are decent but not explosive, Verdy’s away record is patchy, and the first meeting between them this season finished 1-0. That’s the kind of footprint you want when siding against both teams scoring.
The expected scoreline is 0-1, though a 1-0 Urawa win wouldn’t shock anyone either. This feels like one of those matches where the first goal changes everything, and Urawa do have a habit of striking first in these fixtures. Still, with both defences leaving enough openings and neither attack looking unstoppable, a clean sheet for one side feels the most natural outcome.
If you want a secondary angle, under 2.5 goals sits neatly alongside the BTTS call. The meeting history leans that way too.