Willem II Tilburg welcome Almere City FC to the Koning Willem II Stadion on Sunday evening in the Eerste Divisie, with both sides deep in the promotion chase and every point suddenly carrying the weight of a final. Willem II are sitting fourth on 59 points, a little ahead of Almere in fifth on 55, so this isn’t just another top-half meeting. It’s a direct fight for position, momentum and a better path into the run-in. One slip could still reshuffle the pack. That’s how tight it is.
John Stegeman’s side come into it after edging Roda JC Kerkrade 1-0 away on 6 April, while Jeroen Rijsdijk’s Almere were beaten 2-1 at home by FC Den Bosch on the same day. Willem II have the healthier league position, but Almere carry the more explosive attacking numbers across the season, so this one has a familiar Dutch second-tier feel about it: one team with the steadier defensive base, the other with more chaos in their game and plenty of goals in both boxes.
The big question is simple enough. Can Willem II use home advantage to keep control of a promotion six-pointer, or will Almere’s sharpness in the final third drag this into a more open contest? There’s a reason the market has settled on goals. These two aren’t built for 0-0s very often, and both need the win for different reasons.
Willem II Tilburg Form & Analysis
Willem II arrive in decent nick, even if the run hasn’t been flawless. The 1-0 win at Roda JC was a clean, professional away result, the sort that tells you a team’s handling pressure properly. Before that, they beat Jong PSV 1-0 at home, then stumbled against De Graafschap in a 0-2 defeat on their own pitch. That loss was a reminder that Willem II aren’t bulletproof when the game gets stretched. Still, the response was immediate. They’d already gone to MVV Maastricht and won 5-0, then followed that with a 3-1 success at TOP Oss. The only other recent league result in this sequence was a 1-1 draw with FC Den Bosch.
So the story is pretty clear. Willem II have been productive away from home, more measured at their own ground, and pretty good at bouncing back when they’ve taken a hit. That matters here. They’re not blazing through games, but they’re staying hard to beat. And at this stage of the season, that counts for plenty.
Their home record is solid rather than spectacular: eight wins, four draws and five defeats from 17 league matches at Tilburg, with 20 goals scored and 15 conceded. That’s not the kind of home form that screams dominance, but it does tell you they know how to manage games. They’ve kept things tight in plenty of those fixtures. The problem is that 20 home goals is a modest return for a promotion contender, so they often rely on being efficient rather than overwhelming opponents. You can see that in the nature of their recent wins too. A lot of them have been narrow. One goal here, one goal there. That won’t always be enough.
Defensively, there’s a decent base to work from. The league numbers show Willem II with just 40 conceded overall, which is a respectable return over 35 matches. Home and away, they’ve shown a tendency to keep matches within reach. But the attack doesn’t always match the ambition of a fourth-place side. If this turns into a straight shootout, they’ve got the quality to land a punch. If it becomes a grind, they’re still fine. The issue is they don’t always kill games early. That leaves the door open.
Almere City FC Form & Analysis
Almere’s recent form has a wilder edge to it. They were beaten 2-1 at home by FC Den Bosch last time out, but that result doesn’t tell the whole story. They actually produced a huge attacking performance, carving out 25 shots, hitting 8 on target and creating six big chances. On another day, they win comfortably. Instead, they ended up on the wrong side of the result, which is the story of a side that can look thrilling and fragile in the same afternoon.
Before that setback, Almere beat TOP Oss 3-2 at home in a game that had plenty of late stress, and they’d already won away at Jong Ajax 2-0 and Vitesse 3-1. Sandwiched between those away wins was a 2-2 home draw with RKC Waalwijk, plus a 1-0 win over ADO Den Haag. So while the last result was disappointing, the wider trend is still positive. They’re scoring enough to stay dangerous. They’re just giving opponents too many routes back into the game.
That’s the twist with Almere. Their away record is decent enough — eight wins, one draw and eight defeats from 17 league trips, with 33 scored and 33 conceded — but it’s also unmistakably a team that plays on the edge. Those numbers are far livelier than Willem II’s home split. They score more, concede more, and tend to live in higher-event matches. You wouldn’t call them controlled. You’d call them entertaining, maybe a bit reckless. That can work well away from home if the transition game clicks.
The season-long totals are striking. Almere have scored 72 league goals, well clear of Willem II’s 52, and that alone tells you why their games often lean towards goals. Yet they’ve also lost 14 matches, which is more than you’d like for a side sitting in the top five. That’s the trade-off. They can hurt anyone, and they can also make life easy for the other team. Their road output of 33 goals is strong, and they’ve been better on the counter than in prolonged possession spells. Can they keep doing that against a team fighting for promotion security? That’s the real question.
Still, the recent away wins at Jong Ajax and Vitesse weren’t flukes. They showed Almere can travel, score first and put teams under strain. The issue is what happens when they don’t land the early blow. Against Den Bosch, they created plenty and still lost. That’s not a great sign heading into a match where the margins will be fine.
Head-to-Head
These two have met a fair few times across different tiers, and Willem II have had the better of the recent picture. The latest meeting went their way, a 1-0 away win at Almere in August 2025. Before that, Almere beat Willem II 2-0 in the Eredivisie in March 2025, so there’s been some back and forth, but the broader theme is that these matches often stay tight.
That fits the recent rivalry pattern too. Three of the last four league meetings before this season finished with just one goal between the sides, and the last five head-to-heads have all stayed under 2.5 goals. That won’t be ignored. It’s a pretty stubborn trend. If you like a cagey script, this fixture has given it to you before.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 2/5 for this one. It’s short, yes, but it’s still the strongest angle in a game that pairs Willem II’s solid if unspectacular home numbers with Almere’s habit of turning matches into proper end-to-end affairs. The xG projection is lively too — 1.8 for Willem II and 1.3 for Almere — which points to chances at both ends rather than a sterile chess match.
Willem II have enough control to score, Almere have enough firepower to respond, and the visitors’ away split of 33 goals scored and 33 conceded is exactly the sort of profile that keeps totals honest. A 2-1 Willem II win feels the most natural read. That also gives you a bit of tension against the old head-to-head under trend, but the current form of both teams is more open than the historical meetings suggest. If you want a secondary angle, Willem II to score first has a strong case too, given they’ve been first on the board in six of their last seven league matches.