Yokohama F. Marinos return home to face FC Tokyo in J1 League East action on Saturday morning, 11 April 2026, with both sides already carrying very different early-season moods into the derby. Yokohama sit ninth on nine points from their opening nine games, a record that feels underwhelming for a club that usually expects to be higher up the table. FC Tokyo, by contrast, are up in third with 20 points, and their strong start has given them a real platform in the race at the top of the section.
There’s plenty on the line here. For Hideo Oshima’s Marinos, this is about stopping the drift and proving that the heavy defeat at Kashiwa Reysol was a blip rather than the start of something worse. For Rikizo Matsuhashi’s Tokyo, it’s a chance to protect an excellent away record and keep pace near the summit. Their recent meeting only adds spice: FC Tokyo won 3-0 on 7 March, and that result still hangs over this rematch. Yokohama will want revenge. Tokyo will fancy making it two from two.
The first clue that this one should be lively is the contrast in styles and numbers. Yokohama’s home matches have produced goals at both ends, while FC Tokyo have been compact, efficient and awkward to break down on the road. You’d expect the hosts to carry more of the ball and the visitors to wait for their moments. That often leads to a game with spells of pressure, a few openings and, more often than not in this fixture, goals.
Yokohama F. Marinos Form & Analysis
Yokohama’s recent form tells the story of a side that can still explode, but can just as easily unravel. They opened this run with a thrilling 3-2 home win over Tokyo Verdy on 28 February, a match that hinted at all the attacking life they can bring when things click. Then came the 3-0 loss at FC Tokyo on 7 March. That was a rude reminder that they’re vulnerable when the game turns into a contest rather than a procession.
They responded with a clean 2-0 home win over JEF United Chiba on 14 March, and for a moment it looked like they’d settled down. Not quite. A 1-0 defeat away to Mito HollyHock followed, then that stunning 5-0 demolition of Kawasaki Frontale on 22 March. That was their best performance of the campaign by a mile. It had the sort of pace and ruthlessness Yokohama fans demand. Then, just when momentum should have been building, they lost 3-0 at Kashiwa Reysol on 5 April. That one hurt. They were reduced to 10 men early on after Jeisson Quiñónes was sent off, and from there the game slipped away badly.
At home this season, Yokohama’s record is pretty even: two wins, no draws and two defeats, with seven goals scored and seven conceded. That sums them up neatly. They can score, and they can concede. Their overall league record is even more stark — 12 goals scored, 15 conceded — which tells you they’re not controlling matches often enough. The xG from the Kashiwa defeat also raised an eyebrow: just 0.30 created, with 1.42 conceded. That wasn’t a bad day at the office. It was a flat one.
Still, there’s danger in dismissing them too quickly. At home, they’ve already shown they can get on the front foot, and the fact they’ve scored in three of their four league matches at this ground suggests they’re rarely quiet for long. The problem is what comes after the first goal. If they don’t settle the game, the cracks tend to show.
FC Tokyo Form & Analysis
FC Tokyo come into this with a much steadier rhythm. Their last six league games have been a steady mix of control and resilience, and they haven’t lost one since the end of February. They drew 0-0 at home to Machida Zelvia on 5 April, which wasn’t flashy but was the kind of disciplined result good away sides build on. Before that, they went to Machida and won 3-0 on 1 April, a clean and convincing away performance that showed they can travel well when the game opens up.
That wasn’t a one-off either. They drew 0-0 at Tokyo Verdy on 22 March, then beat JEF United Chiba 2-1 away on 18 March, and drew 1-1 at Mito HollyHock on 14 March. The run began with that 3-0 win over Yokohama F. Marinos on 7 March, the sort of result that changes confidence levels in a hurry. Since then, they’ve kept the unbeaten streak rolling. Six games without defeat. Three of those were away. That matters here.
Their away record is one of the best in the division so far: three wins, two draws and no losses, with eight goals scored and only three conceded. That’s a proper base to work from. They aren’t blowing teams away every week, but they don’t need to. Matsuhashi’s side have been hard to unsettle, and they’ve already shown they can keep games under control on the road. The two recent away clean sheets at Machida Zelvia and Tokyo Verdy point to a team who know exactly what they’re doing when they leave home.
There is still a slight caution flag. FC Tokyo haven’t been scoring for fun away from home, and their 0-0 against Machida at the weekend was a reminder that they can become a little too measured. Yet that’s hardly a fatal flaw when you’ve only conceded three away goals all season. They’re organised. They’re patient. And they tend to make opponents work for every chance. That’s why they look such a stubborn side in this sort of fixture.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has leaned heavily towards goals in recent meetings, and FC Tokyo have had the upper hand more often than not. The most recent clash came on 7 March, when Tokyo beat Yokohama 3-0. Before that, Yokohama edged a 3-2 win at FC Tokyo in September 2025, but that result sits inside a broader pattern of high-scoring, see-saw meetings.
FC Tokyo also won 3-0 at Yokohama in June 2025 and 3-1 at home in September 2024. There was a 1-1 draw in May 2024, but outside that, the trend is pretty clear: these games usually open up. Nine of the last ten meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and both teams have scored in seven of the last nine. That’s not a tiny sample. That’s a real habit.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 3/10 here, and it feels a very solid call. The price isn’t flashy, but this isn’t the sort of match you try to be a hero with. Yokohama have been involved in some wild swings already this season, while FC Tokyo have shown enough punch on the road to suggest they can contribute one way or another. Between them, the projected xG sits at 1.3 apiece, which lines up nicely with a game that should produce at least a couple of decent chances.
The recent head-to-head makes the case stronger still. The last meeting finished 3-0 to Tokyo, and several of the recent duels between these sides have sailed past this line. A 1-1 draw is the likeliest scoreline if Tokyo keep things tight and Yokohama find a way to respond at home. Still, 2-0 either way wouldn’t shock anyone. If you want a slightly bolder angle, Both Teams to Score has appeal too, but Over 1.5 is the clear and safer play for this one.