FC Dinamo București host CFR 1907 Cluj in the SuperLiga championship round on Saturday evening, and the table leaves very little room for drift. Dinamo sit fifth on 52 points, one behind CFR in fourth on 53, so this is a proper six-pointer in the race for final-round positioning and, just as importantly, pride in a tight top-half scrap. There’s no trophy on the line, but the difference between finishing fourth and fifth matters plenty in a season where margins have been tiny.
The first meeting in this championship round finished 1-1 in Cluj on 12 April, and that result fits the wider story between these two. Dinamo have been awkward opposition for CFR at home, while CFR have also shown they can spoil Dinamo’s rhythm when the game opens up. Both sides come in with something to prove. Dinamo want to protect a strong home record. CFR want to show they can travel without dropping the standard they’ve set in bursts this spring.
This one feels like a battle between Dinamo’s control at home and CFR’s habit of hanging around. That usually means goals at both ends. Not a shootout, necessarily. But a match with enough life in it to keep both benches honest.
FC Dinamo București Form & Analysis
Dinamo arrive with a decent spring bounce in their step. They beat FC Argeș Pitești 2-1 at home on 10 May, and the manner of it mattered just as much as the result. They were sharp from the start, took the lead early through George Pușcaș, and kept pushing until Kennedy Boateng’s stoppage-time finish settled it. Before that, they’d lost 2-1 away to Universitatea Craiova, which was a reminder that their edge is far less certain on the road. At home, though, they’ve kept finding answers.
Look at the recent run and a picture emerges. Dinamo beat FC Rapid București 3-1 in Bucharest, held Universitatea Craiova 0-0 in the cup, then edged FC Universitatea Cluj 2-1 before that draw in Cluj with CFR. They’re not steamrolling people, but they’re rarely getting dragged into dead football either. They’ve scored in each of their last six competitive matches, and at home they’ve been especially lively. That matters here. Big matches at their ground tend to come with a pulse.
Their home record is the sort of base managers trust. Eight wins, five draws and only two defeats in league matches at home, with 23 scored and just 11 conceded, is the profile of a side that knows how to carry itself in front of its own crowd. That’s not a flat-track bully record — it’s more controlled than that — but it does show why Dinamo are hard to shift once they get into a groove. Željko Kopić’s side have also been first to score in their last six home matches, which tells you they usually start on the front foot. Three wins from their last four league games. Not bad at all.
The slight concern is that they don’t always slam the door shut. Their most recent clean sheet came against Craiova in the cup, and even when they win at home they’re often giving the other side a route back into the match. Still, the attack is doing enough to cover for that. A return of 42 goals overall, combined with a home scoring rate that’s comfortably above one per game, says they’re rarely blanking. If Dinamo get their usual early territory here, CFR will have to work.
CFR 1907 Cluj Form & Analysis
CFR come in unbeaten in four, and that alone keeps them very much in the mix. The last few weeks have been a mix of grit and restraint. They drew 0-0 with Universitatea Craiova on 8 May, a game in which they were almost absurdly efficient defensively — Craiova were kept to scraps, and CFR never looked in much danger of losing it. Before that, they went to FC Rapid București and won 2-1 on 4 May, which is exactly the kind of away result that lifts a dressing room. They also nicked a 1-0 win at FC Argeș Pitești on 17 April and drew 1-1 with Dinamo on 12 April.
That sequence says a lot about Daniel Pancu’s side. They’re not always fluent, and they’ve had their share of awkward away days, but they’re hard to pull apart. CFR have now gone four without defeat and have only lost once in their last six. That’s a proper platform. Mind you, there’s a flip side. Their 0-0 with Craiova came from just seven shots and one effort on target, and the 1-0 at Argeș was tight as a drum. When they don’t get an early foothold, they can become a bit blunt.
Their away record is respectable rather than dominant: six wins, five draws and four defeats, with 19 goals scored and 19 conceded. That balance tells you everything. CFR are capable travellers, but not the sort who impose themselves away from home every week. They’ll stay in games, they’ll nick chances, and they’ll make the other side work for every inch. On the road, that has been good enough to keep them competitive, though not always comfortable. Can they repeat the discipline they showed at Rapid? That’s the key question.
There’s also a wider tendency to keep these matches tight. CFR have gone under 2.5 goals in five of their last six, and that’s no accident. They’re not chasing chaos. They’d rather manage the tempo, wait for mistakes and keep the structure intact. The problem at Dinamo is that structure alone won’t be enough if the hosts start quickly. CFR need to survive the first wave. If they do, they’re dangerous enough to cause trouble later on.
Head-to-Head
These two have already met plenty in 2024 and 2025, and the pattern is pretty clear: no one’s been running away with it. CFR beat Dinamo 2-0 in Cluj on 9 March, but the two league meetings before and after that have been tighter, including Dinamo’s 2-1 home win on 31 October 2025 and the 1-1 draw in Cluj on 12 April 2026. The sequence before that had a similar feel — 1-1 in Bucharest, then CFR wins by narrow margins, then another draw.
One angle stands out from the recent meetings: both teams have scored in six of the last seven head-to-heads. That’s hard to ignore. It doesn’t mean goals galore every time, but it does suggest that once one side lands a punch, the other usually finds a reply. These games have rarely been one-sided for long.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 5/6 for this one. It’s the cleaner angle, and it fits the fixture better than trying to call a winner. Dinamo have scored in six straight and have been first to strike in each of their last six home matches, while CFR have scored in four of their last five away from home and remain difficult to keep out when they settle. Put those together and BTTS looks the right call.
The 1-1 correct score is the sensible shout. Dinamo’s home numbers are strong enough to make them slight favourites for the territory battle, but CFR’s away resilience and the recent head-to-head pattern point towards another match where both sides get their moment. If you wanted a small alternative, under 3.5 goals has some appeal too. This doesn’t scream chaos. It feels more like a controlled, tense draw with both attacks finding a way through once.