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Rodez Aveyron vs Amiens SC: The Corner & Form Data

Amiens SC have produced 8+ corners in 11 straight away games. Rodez are unbeaten in 10 at home. Something has to give.

17 April 2026Rodez Aveyron vs Amiens SC

Rodez Aveyron vs Amiens SC: Corner Streaks, Home Fortress & Five H2H Goals

The numbers tell an interesting story here — and the two most striking ones point in completely opposite directions. Amiens SC arrive at Rodez Aveyron on 17 April 2026 carrying a collapsing league run but an almost freakish corner consistency on the road. Rodez, meanwhile, have quietly built one of Ligue 2's most reliable home records. Put those two facts side by side and this Ligue 2 fixture becomes far more layered than a simple table-position glance would suggest. Check the full match statistics and you'll see exactly what the underlying data is screaming.

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Amiens SC's Away Corner Machine: Eleven Matches, Zero Exceptions

This is the stat that stopped us mid-spreadsheet. Amiens SC have generated 8 or more total corners in every single one of their last 11 away matches. Not most of them. Not ten out of eleven. All eleven.

That kind of consistency in a peripheral market is genuinely rare. Corner counts are noisy — they fluctuate with game state, opposition shape, weather, red cards, late pressure. For one team to breach the same threshold across eleven consecutive away fixtures means something structural is happening, not something lucky.

Why Amiens Generate Corners Even When They're Losing

Look at Amiens SC's average stats over their last five games: 45.0% possession, 8.6 shots, 3.6 shots on target. They hold the ball more than you'd expect from a team that has lost four of their last five. That possession share forces them wide. Wide play produces corners.

But here's the darker reading: Amiens are losing matches and chasing games. A team that goes a goal down and pushes forward will naturally accumulate corners in the final third. Their recent results — losses to Pau FC, Guingamp, Boulogne-sur-Mer, and Le Mans — suggest they spend large chunks of matches in deficit mode, pressing forward, manufacturing delivery opportunities that show up as corners on the stats sheet.

The streak is real. The causes are partly structural, partly the byproduct of desperation. Either way, Rodez Aveyron's average of 4.8 corners per game at home means the combined total has room to run well north of eight.

For the full picture on Amiens SC's underlying numbers, the Amiens SC stats & profile breaks down their season trends in detail.

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Rodez's Home Record: Ten Matches Without Defeat

Rodez Aveyron have not lost a home match in ten consecutive Ligue 2 fixtures. In a division defined by volatility, that is a fortress-level number.

Their last five home results read: W 2-1 vs Troyes, D 1-1 vs Littoral Dunkerque, D 1-1 vs Bastia, W 2-1 vs Reims, W 1-0 vs Grenoble Foot. Three wins, two draws. Compact, functional, hard to beat.

The Low Possession, High Efficiency Paradox

Rodez play with just 39.0% average possession — that's not a misprint. They are one of Ligue 2's most deliberately possession-light sides. They absorb, they transition, they finish. Their xG of 1.6 per game significantly outperforms their shot volume of 12.6, which tells you their shot selection is disciplined rather than speculative.

The trade-off is defensive exposure, but at home that exposure is managed. 11.6 fouls per game and 2.2 yellow cards suggests a team that defends hard but not recklessly on their own turf. The low possession number doesn't indicate a passive team — it indicates a team that has made a tactical choice and is executing it well.

Against an Amiens side averaging just 1.1 xG across their last five matches, Rodez's home solidity looks like a significant structural advantage. See how their home record compares to their full-season profile on the Rodez Aveyron stats & profile.

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Amiens SC's Catastrophic Run: Four Losses in Five

The form table for Amiens is brutal reading. L, D, L, L, L — four defeats in their last five Ligue 2 matches, conceding 10 goals in the process. The 3-4 loss to Le Mans and the 2-4 capitulation to Boulogne-sur-Mer aren't just bad results; they suggest defensive fragility at a structural level.

13.4 fouls per game — the highest of both sides — and 2.2 yellow cards per game paint a picture of a team that is disorganised under pressure. Fouls spike when shape breaks down. Amiens are being forced into reactive defending, and reactive defending produces fouls, cards, and eventually goals against.

The xG Problem

Amiens' 1.1 xG average over their last five games is the number that contextualises everything else. They're not unlucky. They're not generating chances and failing to convert. They are simply not creating meaningful goal threat in sustained periods of play.

Compare that to Rodez's 1.6 xG at home and the gap is significant. Not insurmountable — but significant. A team averaging 1.1 xG on the road, in the middle of a confidence collapse, facing a side that hasn't lost at home in ten matches, is operating from a deeply uncomfortable starting position.

Amiens' only defensive solidity this run came in the draw with Bastia and the narrow 0-1 loss to Guingamp — both low-scoring, attritional affairs. Once the game opens up, as the Le Mans and Boulogne results show, they leak badly.

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Five H2H Meetings, Five Matches With Goals at Both Ends

This is the second headline stat — and it's the one that reframes the whole fixture. In the last five head-to-head meetings between Rodez Aveyron and Amiens SC, both teams have scored in every single match.

The sequence: 2-2 (Dec 2023), 1-1 (Mar 2024), 2-1 Amiens (Sep 2024), 1-1 (Feb 2025), 2-1 Amiens (Oct 2025). Not a single blank sheet from either side across five consecutive encounters. That is a remarkably consistent pattern in a fixture that has otherwise been relatively tight and low-scoring.

What This Tells Us About How These Teams Actually Play Each Other

Rodez's 39% possession style means they cede control even at home. Against Amiens specifically, that has historically meant Amiens find spaces on the counter even when Rodez are dominating territorially. Meanwhile, Rodez's direct, transition-based attack consistently finds a way through regardless of how deep they start.

The pattern holds even across Amiens' current poor form. In the October 2025 meeting — their most recent H2H — Amiens won 2-1 at Rodez. Rodez still scored. The February 2025 draw at Amiens? Both sides got on the scoresheet again. This specific matchup produces goals at both ends with unusual regularity.

Amiens' current defensive shakiness should be weighed against the historical reality that Rodez score in this fixture. Their 4.2 shots on target per game at home may look modest, but in H2H context, it's been enough to find the net every time.

For more AI-powered contextual trends across Ligue 2, today's AI-powered analysis runs the full model across every fixture.

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The Numbers That Matter Most

  • Amiens SC have generated 8+ total corners in 11 consecutive away matches. No exceptions. Combined with Rodez's 4.8 home average, the aggregate corner count in this fixture has consistent upward pressure regardless of result.
  • Rodez are unbeaten in 10 straight home Ligue 2 matches, conceding the minimum while playing with just 39% possession — a rare combination that suggests defensive organisation, not passive resistance.
  • Both teams have scored in all five of their last H2H meetings, including in October 2025 when Amiens won 2-1 at Rodez. Rodez's home strength hasn't stopped them conceding in this fixture; Amiens' current poor form hasn't historically stopped them scoring in it.
  • Amiens average just 1.1 xG over their last five games — the lowest of either side — and their 13.4 fouls per game suggests a team that is tactically disjointed, not just unlucky. Low xG, high foul count, four losses: the symptoms of a side losing its defensive shape entirely.
  • Rodez's 1.6 xG at home significantly outperforms their 12.6 shots per game, which means they are taking fewer, better chances. Against an Amiens side conceding freely, that clinical efficiency matters more than shot volume alone would imply.
  • This Ligue 2 fixture has two competing narratives running simultaneously: Rodez's structural home dominance pushing toward a controlled result, and a five-match H2H history that refuses to produce clean sheets. The corner data sits above all of it, stubbornly consistent regardless of who wins or loses. That's the kind of divergence the data rewards you for finding.