FC Argeș Pitești welcome FC Rapid București to Pitești on Friday evening in the SuperLiga championship round, and both sides arrive with plenty still on the line even if the title race itself is already out of reach for the hosts. Argeș are 6th with 50 points, trying to finish this phase with some dignity after a season that has been solid enough at home but too flat for too long elsewhere. Rapid sit 2nd on 56 points and remain in the mix for the strongest possible finish, which matters for pride, momentum and the broader sense that this campaign should end with a statement, not a wobble.
What makes this one a little awkward to call is that both teams are in a rut. Argeș haven’t won in eight. Rapid haven’t won in seven. That doesn’t scream free-flowing entertainment, and the recent history between them points the same way. Their last meeting in Bucharest on 13 April ended 0-0, and these two have spent plenty of time cancelling each other out over the years. Friday’s game has the feel of a tight, tense scrap rather than a wide-open shootout.
FC Argeș Pitești Form & Analysis
Argeș come into this one off a narrow 2-1 defeat at Dinamo București on 10 May, a match that had a bit of life to it but still ended the same way so many of their recent games have ended: with frustration. They took an early lead through George Pușcaș, only to be dragged back and then beaten late by Kennedy Boateng in stoppage time. That was classic Argeș in the current run. A decent spell, a competitive performance, then nothing to show for it. Before that, they lost 1-0 away to Universitatea Cluj and 1-0 at home to Universitatea Craiova, with a 1-1 draw against Universitatea Cluj in the cup the only thing stopping this from being an even uglier stretch.
Look at the bigger picture and it’s grim reading. Their last six have brought no wins at all, with only that cup draw to interrupt a run of defeats. The last league win was all the way back on 13 March, a 1-0 away success at Universitatea Craiova. That feels like a different season now. Since then, Bogdan Andone’s side have struggled to turn decent spells into results, and they’ve lost five of their last eight in all competitions. The worrying part isn’t just the results; it’s the way they’re doing it. They’re not being thrashed. They’re just not getting enough at either end.
At home, though, Argeș have at least given their fans something sturdier to lean on across the season. Their league record at this ground stands at 8 wins, 3 draws and 4 defeats, with 18 goals scored and only 10 conceded. That’s a proper base. It tells you they can be awkward, compact and organised when they’re at their best. The problem is that recent home form hasn’t matched the season-long numbers, and they’ve now gone five matches without a clean sheet. You can make a case that they’ll keep this close. You can’t make a strong case that they’ll suddenly start playing like a team full of confidence. Not after this run.
There’s also a recurring pattern with Argeș that matters for this game: their matches tend to stay tight. Nine of their last 10 have gone under 2.5 goals, which fits the way they’ve been trying to survive rather than dominate. They’re not creating a torrent of chances and they’re not defending with total control either. It’s a narrow channel. Friday could easily follow that script.
FC Rapid București Form & Analysis
Rapid’s recent run looks almost as bleak, even if their overall season position is much healthier. They fell 1-0 away to FC Universitatea Cluj on 9 May after going behind to Dorin Codrea’s 17th-minute strike and never really recovering. The numbers from that defeat were poor too: just 0.29 xG, no shots on target, and no obvious route back into the match. Before that came a 2-1 home loss to CFR 1907 Cluj, and before that another away defeat, 3-1 at Dinamo București. That’s four straight league losses now, and seven matches without a win. For a side that’s second in the table, that’s not a good look.
Still, Rapid’s campaign hasn’t suddenly become a disaster. Their league record remains strong overall, and their away form is actually better than Argeș’s home numbers would suggest. Constantin Galca’s side are 2nd in the away table with 8 wins, 4 draws and 3 losses, scoring 21 and conceding 14 on the road. That’s a clean enough profile for a team that knows how to travel. They don’t need to blow opponents away. They just need enough control to stay in the game, and their away numbers say they’re capable of doing that even when their recent results have gone cold.
What’s strange about Rapid is how quickly their attacking threat has dried up. They scored three at Dinamo on 26 April, and that looked like a possible turning point after a decent run. It wasn’t. Since then, they’ve managed just one goal in each of their next two league matches and none at all in the defeat at Universitatea Cluj. The structure is still there, but the edge is missing. When you’re losing every week, belief goes first. That’s the real issue here. They’ve lost four in a row, and while those defeats have mostly been close, they’re still defeats.
The away record suggests they’re not nearly as fragile as the recent form line implies. Rapid have also been involved in a lot of low-scoring away matches, which matters here because they don’t tend to open games up when they’re on the road. You’d expect them to keep things measured, especially against an Argeș side that’s short on sharpness but usually stubborn at home. Mind you, measured doesn’t always mean effective. Rapid need a response, and they’ve been short of one for a month.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other well enough by now, and the recent meetings have generally been tight. The last league encounter on 13 April finished 0-0 in Bucharest, which fits the broader pattern between them. Before that, Argeș beat Rapid 2-1 in the cup in December 2025, but Rapid had won the previous league meeting 2-0 in November. There’s no real sign of a one-sided rivalry here, just a series of games where margins have mattered and neither side has often run away with it.
The longer trend leans toward caution. Four of the last five meetings between them have stayed under 2.5 goals, and that’s a decent guide for Friday. These games have a habit of turning into tactical tugs rather than end-to-end contests. That’s the kind of record you notice fast. Especially when both teams arrive out of form.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 4/9 is the angle here, and it looks the safest route in a match where neither side is exactly booming. Rapid are winless in seven, but they’re still the stronger side on paper, they’re higher in the table, and their away record — 8 wins, 4 draws and only 3 losses — is much better than Argeș’s recent overall return. That gives them a decent floor, even if their current attacking form is poor.
The other big reason to trust X2 is the shape of the fixture itself. Argeș are hard to beat at home across the season, but they’ve got no momentum at all, and their scoring output has been thin for weeks. Rapid don’t have the look of a side ready to burst out and win comfortably, which is why a drawn game is a very live outcome. 1-1 feels about right, with both teams likely to trade control rather than seize it. If you want a more conservative spin, under 2.5 goals also has plenty going for it, but X2 is the best fit given Rapid’s overall quality and Argeș’s long winless stretch.