RSC Anderlecht's recent home consistency makes outright markets asymmetric: the home side have not lost in their last three matches at Lotto Park and that baseline favours conservative backing that shields against a draw. A Draw No Bet on RSC Anderlecht trades that protection for relatively short odds because the home run reduces the likelihood of a shock reverse. The risk is rotation in a Club Friendly Games fixture; if Anderlecht rest core attackers the outright win line weakens quickly.
Goals offer a clearer signal. Both previews in the briefing push the Both Teams To Score angle, and the available prices reflect disagreement about degree not direction. NEC's pattern of conceding while still finding the net supports BTTS: Yes — it fits a match where Anderlecht press and create chances but also leave space behind their full-backs. That combination makes Over/Under lines volatile; a low total only holds if Anderlecht deliberately slow the tempo.
A correct-score market captures the most likely outcome implied by those trends. Narrow Anderlecht wins such as 2-1 combine home resilience with NEC's ability to score. Bookmakers price a 2-1 into a value band when the home team is clear favourite but the away side shows attacking threat. That scoreline also reflects how friendly fixtures unfold: fewer substitutions in the first hour, then an open finish with late goals as fitness wanes.
Market interaction matters. A dominant supply of BTTS staking at short odds (1.50–1.80) would push match-winner prices towards a higher Anderlecht win price and compress correct-score value. Conversely, heavy early money on Anderlecht to win would shorten the Draw No Bet line and reduce the appeal of scoring markets. A single named preview in the brief shows BTTS with a long price (3.12) while another prices it at 1.56; the split implies traders expect movement as team news emerges.
Kick-off information and first XI announcements should therefore decide which market offers the clearest margin between probability and price.