Al Kholood Predictions
AI-powered match predictions, accuracy tracking, and bookmaker consensus comparisons.
📊 Past Predictions (latest 5)
Al Kholood and Al-Fateh cancelled each other out in a goalless stalemate that defied both teams' recent form and the pre-match narrative entirely. Our model predicted a 2-1 home victory, backed by compelling statistical reasoning: Al Kholood's strong home record against this opponent, Al-Fateh's abysmal away form, and a historical pattern of high-scoring encounters between these sides. Instead, neither team managed to find the net, a result that calls for honest reckoning with what the data missed.
The prediction was built on solid foundations. Al-Fateh arrived in poor away form and seemingly without motivation as a mid-table side, while Al Kholood needed points in their fight to climb from 14th. The H2H record screamed goals—five of the last six meetings had seen both teams score, with four of the previous five ending over 2.5. Yet Al-Fateh's defence held firm, and Al Kholood's attack, despite the home advantage, lacked the cutting edge the model anticipated. This was a reminder that historical patterns and situational incentives don't always predict in-match execution.
Our model assigned only 34% probability to a draw, so the 0-0 result represents a clear miss. The data flagged the right match-ups and trends, but occasionally fixtures simply don't cooperate with the narrative. Both teams played with caution rather than ambition, producing a defensive display that contradicted everything the pre-match indicators suggested. It's a useful lesson in why accuracy tracking matters—this is one prediction that didn't land.
Al-Ahli Jeddah dismantled Al Kholood with a clinical 3-0 victory, establishing complete control from the opening moments. Ivan Toney struck first in the 18th minute with an assist from Frank Kessie, before S. Abu Al Shamat doubled the lead just two minutes later, also fed by Kessie's creativity. The gulf in class widened further when Edimilson Millot added a third before halftime in the 41st minute, leaving Al Kholood with no realistic path back into the contest. The shutout capped a dominant performance that reflected the vast difference in ambition and quality between the two sides.
Our model's prediction of a 3-0 scoreline proved precisely accurate, validating the analytical framework we'd established beforehand. The key factors flagged in our pre-match assessment materialized exactly as expected: Al-Ahli's ruthless attacking efficiency, built on Kessie's midfield orchestration and clinical finishing, overwhelmed a toothless Al Kholood side averaging under a goal per game. Al-Ahli's hunger for a top-two finish contrasted sharply with Al Kholood's mid-table complacency, and that motivation gap translated directly onto the pitch. The defensive solidity we'd identified—Al-Ahli conceding just 0.85 goals at home—remained intact, while the attacking projection of 3+ goals proved conservative given the early two-goal burst.
The result underscored the importance of form, context, and historical pattern recognition in football analysis. Al-Ahli's recent run of eight wins in their last ten games, combined with Al Kholood's deteriorating form, created a predictable asymmetry that the model captured effectively.
Al Kholood and Al Okhdood served up a goalless stalemate on Saturday, a result that confounded the pre-match expectation of a narrow home victory. Our model had predicted a 1-0 scoreline favoring Al Kholood with 54% win probability, but the attacking impotence on display—particularly from the visitors—meant neither side could find the breakthrough.
The prediction missed the mark on result direction, though the underlying logic wasn't entirely misplaced. Al Okhdood's relegation status and historically poor attacking output of 0.65 goals per game did materialize as a genuine constraint on their threat level. What our analysis underestimated was Al Kholood's vulnerability in converting chances at home, despite averaging 1.17 goals in their own stadium. The hosts' defensive frailties, flagged at 2.04 conceded per game, remained intact—they simply weren't breached. The low expected goals total of 1.78 identified in pre-match analysis proved prescient; the match developed as a attritional affair with neither team generating sufficient quality to break the deadlock.
The draw represents a missed opportunity for Al Kholood, who held clear motivation advantages and superiority in the head-to-head record. For Al Okhdood, the point offers nothing material given their mathematical relegation, though it does represent a minor salvage operation defensively. Our model's lean toward Under 2.5 goals and skepticism around both teams scoring proved accurate in spirit, even if the exact scoreline eluded prediction. In a fixture where marginal differences in execution typically decide outcomes, Saturday demonstrated how fine those margins truly are.
Al-Ittihad FC and Al Kholood played out a goalless draw on Saturday, a result that diverged sharply from our pre-match model's expectation of a 3-1 home victory. The prediction had assigned Al-Ittihad a 73 percent win probability based on their superior home form—averaging 1.46 goals scored and 1.37 conceded across six matches—and a historical pattern of high-scoring encounters between these sides. Our analyst had flagged the fixture as a relatively straightforward affair, with combined expected goals of 4.07 and a five-match head-to-head average of 3.2 goals per game strongly suggesting an over 2.5 outcome.
What actually unfolded, however, was a match devoid of the attacking fluency the data suggested. Despite Al-Ittihad's recent form showing four wins from their last four outings, they failed to break down an Al Kholood defense that had appeared vulnerable in recent weeks, conceding 2.52 goals per game on average. The visitors, meanwhile, could not capitalize on any opportunities to exploit a home side potentially lacking urgency given their mid-table position and minimal stakes.
Our model missed on this one. The prediction leaned heavily on historical patterns and underlying form metrics, both of which appeared sound on paper. Yet neither side managed to convert the attacking potential suggested by recent form and head-to-head trends. The 0-0 result represents a significant outlier from the expected trajectory, a reminder that even well-supported statistical frameworks cannot always predict tactical caution or simple inefficiency in the final third.
Al Kholood and Al-Fayha played out a 1-1 draw in a match that saw both sides cancel each other out after a competitive opening half. Christopher Smalling's 30th-minute finish, set up by F. Sakala, gave Al-Fayha an early advantage, but Al Kholood responded quickly through Ivan Kortajarena's 39th-minute leveller from Guga's assist. The two goals arrived within nine minutes and set the tone for a match that never quite developed beyond that initial burst of intensity.
Our model predicted a 2-1 Al Kholood win, missing the eventual draw result. The prediction was anchored on several reasonable premises: Al Kholood's home advantage and season-end urgency, Al-Fayha's poor away record and mid-table apathy, and a historical head-to-head dynamic heavily favoring the hosts. The 2.7 goals-per-game average from previous meetings suggested an over-2.5 scoreline was likely. What the model didn't account for was the match becoming tactically cautious after the early goal sequence. Both teams appeared content to consolidate rather than push for a second goal, leaving the prediction's predicted scoreline just out of reach.
The draw itself was defensible given the circumstances. Al-Fayha showed more defensive discipline away from home than recent form suggested, while Al Kholood failed to convert their possession into clear-cut chances. The match illustrated a common blind spot in pre-match analysis: teams with nothing to play for can still tighten up in real time, and mid-table visitors are capable of grinding out results that betray their underlying quality.