FK Javor Ivanjica host FK Mladost Lučani on Saturday evening in the Mozzart Bet Superliga Relegation Round, with both clubs still chasing a bit of comfort and a clean finish to the season. There’s no glamour on offer here, but there is pressure. Javor sit fifth with 41 points, Mladost one place and one point behind on 40, and that alone gives this game a proper edge. Every point matters in this part of the campaign. Every slip feels bigger than it should.
For Javor, the picture is fairly simple. They’ve been strong enough at home to give themselves a fighting chance, but their wider season has had enough wobble in it to keep them honest. Mladost arrive with a very different profile: more draws, fewer goals, and a road record that’s left them exposed far too often. You can already see why the market has landed on a home win. This isn’t a mismatch, but it does lean one way.
The journey into this final phase has been uneven for both sides. Javor were battered 6-1 away at TSC Bačka Topola on 10 May, a result that will still sting, especially after they’d looked so much more secure in the games before it. Mladost lost 1-0 at Radnički Niš on the same day, which was less dramatic but just as frustrating in a different way — one shot, no real punch, and another reminder that their away attack can disappear for long spells. That contrast matters. One team can at least create chaos. The other often just creates headaches for itself.
FK Javor Ivanjica Form & Analysis
Javor’s recent run has been a proper rollercoaster, and not the fun kind. They went to Radnički Niš on 23 April and came away on the wrong end of a 3-2 defeat after a game that clearly had enough open space for both sides to do damage. Then came a strong response at home, a 4-0 dismantling of Napredak Kruševac on 27 April, which looked like a statement win at the time. They followed it with a flat 0-0 draw against IMT Beograd on 3 May, before collapsing badly at TSC a week later. There’s been punch in their play, but also a nasty tendency to lose structure when the game turns messy.
At home, though, Javor have built something much more dependable. Their league record at their own ground reads seven wins, seven draws and only four defeats, with 21 goals scored and 14 conceded. That’s a solid base. They’re not blowing teams away every other week, but they’re hard enough to beat and usually good for a few chances of their own. In a relegation round where margins are tight, that home security has carried them a long way. They’ve also shown they can keep things compact when required, and that matters against a Mladost side who don’t travel with much conviction in front of goal.
Still, there’s a slight warning light here. Javor have conceded in three of their last four, and the 6-1 hammering at TSC was ugly enough to dent confidence. When they’re on it, they can dominate the ball in useful areas and turn home territory into pressure. When they’re not, the whole thing can unravel quickly. The good news for Radovan Ćurčić is that Javor usually don’t need a huge amount to get on top at this venue. They just need a steadier start than they managed in their last outing. That won’t be hard to improve on.
FK Mladost Lučani Form & Analysis
Mladost’s last six tell a familiar story: they’re competitive, but they’re rarely convincing. They were edged 1-0 at Radnički Niš on 10 May, and that defeat summed up their problem on the road. There wasn’t enough threat, not enough volume, not enough conviction when the match started to lean away from them. Before that, they’d put together a decent little spell. A 2-1 home win over Spartak Subotica on 3 May was followed by a 2-1 away success at TSC Bačka Topola on 27 April, a result that stands out as one of their better away performances of the season. But the sequence also included a goalless draw with Radnički 1923 and a 1-1 draw at IMT. They’re hard to shake off. They’re also hard to trust.
Away from home, the numbers are pretty unforgiving. Mladost’s league away record is only three wins, six draws and nine defeats, with 12 goals scored and 32 conceded. That’s a heavy defensive load. The attack is too often blunt, and when they do fall behind, the response can be slow. Can they nick a result if the game stays tight? Sure. But asking them to dictate matters at Javor’s ground feels optimistic. They’ve drawn a lot, they’ve lost too many, and they’ve conceded far too freely on their travels. That’s not the profile of a side you want to back with much enthusiasm.
Nenad Mijailovic’s team do at least have a stubborn edge. They’ve gone through spells where they grind opponents down and keep themselves alive into the last quarter of the game. The 1-0 win at TSC was proof they can still land a punch away from home. Yet that feels more like the exception than the rule. The broader away picture is much less flattering, and their recent lack of cutting edge is a problem here. Three straight away games without a clean sheet have left them vulnerable, and if Javor get into rhythm early, Mladost may find themselves chasing shadows.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other well enough, and the recent meetings point to a tight, often awkward fixture. When they met in Ivanjica on 23 February 2026, it finished 0-0. Before that, Mladost beat Javor 2-1 in Lučani in September 2025, while Javor were beaten 2-0 in a friendly at home in June 2025. Go back a little further and the balance becomes even more familiar: Javor edged a 1-0 home win in April 2024, Mladost won 1-0 in November 2023, and there’s a 1-1 draw from March 2023 too.
The strongest pattern is clear enough. These games don’t usually explode into chaos. Seven of the last eight meetings have gone under 2.5 goals, which fits the character of the fixture and the way both sides have approached it. That’s the sort of trend you don’t ignore lightly.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing FK Javor Ivanjica to win at 5/4 here. That’s the call. Their home record is much stronger than Mladost’s away numbers, and that gap is hard to overlook when both teams are separated by just one point in the standings. Javor also carry a bit more attacking threat, with 21 home goals compared with Mladost’s 12 on the road. That’s a meaningful edge, and it should tell if the game opens up at all.
The 2-1 correct score feels live. Javor don’t look like a clean-sheet banker after the 6-1 collapse at TSC, and Mladost have enough stubbornness to nick one if Javor get sloppy. Still, the home side have the better platform and the sharper edge in their own stadium. If you want a slightly safer route, Javor in the draw no bet market would be the alternative angle, but the straight home win is the stronger view.