Botev Plovdiv host Lokomotiv Plovdiv in a Bulgarian First Professional League Qualifying Round derby on Sunday afternoon, and there’s a lot riding on it despite the lack of league-table context in the brief. It’s a city rivalry with all the usual heat, but there’s a more practical edge too: both sides are trying to finish this phase strongly and carry momentum into the next stage. That’s the real currency at this point in the season. Confidence, rhythm, and a bit of local bragging rights.
Botev arrive with the cleaner recent story. Lachezar Baltanov’s side have put together a five-game unbeaten run, and they’ve done it with a mix of control and grit. Lokomotiv, under Dušan Kosič, have also been hard to beat for long stretches, but they come into this one after a home defeat to Cherno More Varna in the league and a 1-1 cup draw with Arda Kardzhali. The away side have enough steel to make this awkward, though. These derbies usually are.
Botev Plovdiv Form & Analysis
Botev’s recent form has the feel of a side getting sharper at the right time. The away win at Arda Kardzhali on 26 April was tidy and practical, a 2-0 result built on a first-half strike from Todor Nedelev and an own goal after the break. Before that came a more routine-looking 3-0 success at FK Dobrudzha Dobrich, and then the 1-1 derby draw with Lokomotiv in early April. That was a match they didn’t lose, but it also felt like one they wanted more from. Still, they followed it with a 5-0 hammering of FK Spartak Varna at home, and that sort of scoreline always leaves a mark on a dressing room.
The older results complete the picture. Botev beat Slavia Sofia away 1-0, then slipped at home to Botev Vratsa in a 3-1 loss back in mid-March. Since that defeat, they’ve been unbeaten in five. That’s a proper run, not just a lucky bounce. The most recent performance against Arda was especially encouraging because it wasn’t just about the scoreline; the chance quality was decent, with 13 shots to Arda’s 7 and 8 on target compared with 3. They kept the game under control. That matters going into a derby.
At home, Botev have shown they can be ruthless when they get on top. The 5-0 win over Spartak Varna was the obvious headline, but even beyond that there’s been a sense of attacking confidence about their recent play. They’ve scored in four of their last five and have been first to score in six of their last seven overall, which is exactly the sort of habit that can shape a tight derby. They’re not immaculate at the back, mind you. The 3-1 home loss to Botev Vratsa is a reminder that if they get stretched, they can be hurt. But this version of Botev looks more settled than the one that lost that game.
Lokomotiv Plovdiv Form & Analysis
Lokomotiv’s form has been a little less clean, but it hasn’t been poor. Far from it. Their last six read like a side that’s been difficult to break down, even if they’ve left points behind. The 1-0 home win over Lokomotiv Sofia on 3 April gave them a lift, then the 1-1 draw away to Botev in the derby came next. Another away draw followed at Beroe Stara Zagora, this one goalless, before a huge 4-0 cup win at Arda Karzhdali. That was the high point of the spell. Since then, though, the energy has dipped a little: a 0-1 home loss to Cherno More in the league, then a 1-1 cup draw at home to Arda on 30 April.
That pattern tells you plenty. Lokomotiv are organised and stubborn, especially away from home, where they’ve already drawn at Beroe and Botev in their recent league travels. They don’t chase games recklessly. They stay in them. The downside is obvious enough: goals can be slow to arrive. The derby draw on 8 April and the blank at Beroe both came with modest attacking output, and when they do fall behind, they don’t always look like a side that can simply turn the screw. That’s why the 4-0 cup win at Arda stands out. When they click, they can be dangerous. The problem is that they don’t do it every week.
Away from home, Lokomotiv’s record has been respectable rather than dominant. They haven’t been getting battered, which keeps them alive in this sort of match, but they’ve also lacked the edge to turn draws into wins. Their recent away results show exactly that split personality: no goals at Beroe, a 1-1 draw at Botev, and a big cup win at Arda. You wouldn’t expect them to fold in Plovdiv. You would expect them to make Botev work for every chance. Still, they’re not arriving with the kind of attacking flow that says they’ll run away with this.
Head-to-Head
This derby has been tight for a while, and the recent meetings back that up. The latest clash between the sides ended 1-1 at Botev on 8 April, while Lokomotiv edged the cup tie 1-0 at home on 12 February. Before that, there was another 1-1 draw in November, a 1-0 Botev win in December 2024, and a 2-2 draw in July of that same year. You get the point. Nobody’s had much breathing room.
The wider pattern is even clearer: these meetings tend to stay short on goals. That’s been the case across several of the recent derbies, and it’s one reason the market around both teams to score and the under has real pull here. Derby games can break pattern. This one usually doesn’t.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We are backing Both Teams To Score at 5/6 for this derby. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the betting guides hub pulls together all of our core football betting explainers so you can jump straight to the market or strategy you need. It’s a fair price for a match that keeps landing in the same place. The most recent meeting finished 1-1, Lokomotiv have scored in enough away games to stay relevant, and Botev’s home record isn’t the kind of shut-the-door profile that guarantees a clean sheet. One team rarely dominates this fixture for long.
The 1-1 correct score appeals too. Botev have been the more convincing side over the last few weeks, but Lokomotiv are awkward, compact, and usually good enough to nick a goal in a derby like this. Botev’s habit of scoring first is a major plus, though, and it suggests they should have the better of the opening exchanges. The flip side? Lokomotiv are stubborn enough to respond. One-all feels right.
If you want a secondary angle, under 2.5 goals has clear appeal given the history between these two and Lokomotiv’s recent run of tighter games. But BTTS is the stronger play. It fits the rhythm of the rivalry and the form of both sides.