RS Berkane's recent run and defensive shape dominate the result picture. Their six-match winning streak is the clearest short-term form signal; victories in that sequence have been built on a compact backline and low concession rate, which makes backing a visitor win sensible. Hassania d'Agadir sit in the lower reaches of the table and have offered few signs of consistent attacking threat, so the result market tilts towards RS Berkane but with a pragmatic layer of protection from the draw-no-bet angle because domestic away wins remain inherently riskier.
The goal-line case runs in parallel. Berkane's streak has featured tight scorelines rather than high-scoring shootouts, so a market that prices under 2.5 goals or ‘both teams not to score’ finds rational support. A clear majority of match previews highlight Berkane's defensive solidity as the engine of their run, and Hassania's defensive frailties when under pressure mean the likely pattern is a controlled Berkane possession phase with limited clear-cut chances for the hosts.
There is an upset pathway that supports a longer-priced home win. Hassania at home can adopt a low block and spring fast counters; if Berkane over-commits early or rotate key defenders, a narrow home victory becomes plausible. That scenario, however, requires Hassania to convert a small number of chances and for Berkane to depart from the defensive discipline that has produced six straight wins.
Finally, the alternative markets reflect these contrasts. A draw-no-bet for RS Berkane isolates the core value of the market view while limiting downside. A BTTS:NO or under-goals selection mirrors the defensive evidence. Backing Hassania outright is a high-risk punt tied to tactical surprise or rare bench/lineup shifts. Expect the settled probability distribution to favour a low-scoring RS Berkane win, with the most reliable exposures being outcome protection or low-goals structures rather than all-out match-winner punts.