Arda Kardzhali welcome Lokomotiv Plovdiv on Saturday evening in the First Professional League’s qualifying round, with both sides still chasing a strong finish to the campaign. It’s third against second in the table, and that alone gives this a proper edge. Arda sit on 48 points, Lokomotiv on 52, so there’s not much between them on the season as a whole — but there’s enough at stake to keep the mood sharp and the margins tight.
For Arda, this is a chance to protect home pride and keep pressure on the sides above them. For Lokomotiv, there’s a different kind of incentive: strengthen their grip on second place and go into the run-in with momentum. These teams know each other well by now too. They’ve already met four times since late April, across league and cup, and that recent familiarity has brought a clear pattern. Goals have been scarce. Tempers haven’t been.
The first question is whether Arda can respond after Lokomotiv beat them 2-0 in Plovdiv on 8 May. The hosts did at least bounce back with a 2-1 away win over Botev Plovdiv on 12 May, while Lokomotiv went down 2-0 at Cherno More Varna on the same day. So both sides arrive carrying recent contradiction: one has just taken a confidence-lifter, the other has just been brought back to earth. That usually makes for a cagey night.
Arda Kardzhali Form & Analysis
Arda’s recent run has been a bit of a mixed bag, but there’s a decent story inside the numbers. They came out on the wrong side of a 2-0 defeat at Lokomotiv Plovdiv on 8 May, then played out a goalless draw at home to Cherno More Varna on 3 May. Before that they were held 1-1 by Lokomotiv in the cup at Plovdiv, so even when they’ve stayed competitive, they haven’t always found the cutting edge to turn solid performances into wins.
The bigger concern is what happened before that. Arda were beaten 2-0 at home by Botev Plovdiv on 26 April, then thumped 4-0 by Lokomotiv at home in the cup on 22 April. That’s not a comfortable spell for a side trying to look authoritative on their own ground. Still, the 2-1 win at Botev on 12 May changes the mood a little. It wasn’t perfect — they were outshot, outcreated and spent long periods under pressure — but they found a way. Calal Huseinov and Carlos Meotti delivered the goals, and that matters.
At home this season, Arda’s record is respectable rather than dominant: seven wins, five draws and five defeats, with 15 goals scored and 14 conceded. That’s the profile of a side that rarely gets blown away at its own ground, but also doesn’t often take complete control. The clean defensive return isn’t bad, yet the attack hasn’t been explosive either. They’ve got enough structure to stay in games, and that’s usually the start of a decent home bet. But they don’t tend to turn matches into shootouts. Three home goals in their last four league outings says plenty. Not exactly rampant.
That fits the wider picture too. Arda’s season hasn’t been built on wild variance. They’ve been steady, sometimes stubborn, and often a little blunt. Their xG projection for this one sits at 0.9, which is hardly the mark of a team expected to come out swinging. What they do have is the kind of home record that keeps them alive in tight contests. If this turns into a scrap rather than a spectacle, Arda won’t mind that at all.
Lokomotiv Plovdiv Form & Analysis
Lokomotiv’s recent run has been just as uneven, though their ceiling has looked a bit higher. They beat Arda 2-0 at home on 8 May, then followed that with a 2-0 win away at Botev Plovdiv on 3 May. Those were solid, controlled results, the sort that suggest a team happy to travel and do a job. Then came the stumble at Cherno More Varna on 12 May, a 2-0 away defeat that broke the rhythm and reminded everyone that this side isn’t bulletproof.
Before that, Lokomotiv had lost 1-0 at home to Cherno More on 26 April, so they’ve still got a few defensive wobbles in the mix. There was also a 1-1 draw with Arda in the cup on 30 April, which fitted the tone of the rivalry. On the bright side, the 4-0 cup win at Arda on 22 April was a serious statement. That one showed what Lokomotiv can look like when they get their press and movement right. They were ruthless that night. Really ruthless.
Away from home in the league, Lokomotiv have picked up four wins, nine draws and four defeats, scoring 18 and conceding 20. That’s a slightly awkward split. They’re hard to beat on the road for long spells, but they draw too many matches to feel properly safe. Nine away draws is a lot. It tells you they can stay in games, but also that they don’t always land the knockout punch. For a team sitting second, you’d expect a bit more sharpness. That’s the truth of it.
There are signs, though, that Lokomotiv can keep this one tight. Their xG projection is only 0.8, which mirrors the low-tempo feel of the fixture. They’re not being priced as a side likely to run away with it, and that feels fair. Their best away work has come when they’ve kept things compact and patient, then nicked moments in transition. The problem is that they haven’t always followed that script consistently. Can they keep it up on the road? That’s the big question.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been dominated by recent meetings between the two, and the tone has been set by Lokomotiv’s results at home. They beat Arda 2-0 in the league on 8 May, and before that drew 1-1 in the cup at home on 30 April. Go back a little further and Lokomotiv’s 4-0 cup win over Arda in Kardzhali on 22 April stands out as the heaviest result in this run of meetings.
Arda have had their moments too. They won 2-0 away at Lokomotiv in December 2025 and drew 0-0 at home in August 2025, so they know they can frustrate this opponent. The pattern, though, leans towards caution. Five of the last six meetings have finished with under 2.5 goals, and that feels like the key historical note here. These games haven’t been wild. They’ve usually been tense, hard-fought and a touch cagey.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Home Win at 1/2 for this one. Arda’s home record isn’t flashy, but it’s steady enough to trust against a Lokomotiv side that’s been a bit too draw-heavy away from home and just lost 2-0 at Cherno More. The hosts also have the slight edge in the table motivation, and their recent away win at Botev should’ve given them a lift after that Lokomotiv setback.
The score call is 2-1 to Arda Kardzhali. It’s not a huge leap from the numbers: both teams have shown they can create just enough, but neither is built for sustained pressure here. Lokomotiv’s recent away record suggests they’ll have a say, yet Arda’s home solidity tips the balance. If you wanted a safer angle, under 2.5 goals has plenty of appeal given the way these meetings usually go.