FK Spartak Varna host Lokomotiv Sofia on Friday evening in the final round of the First Professional League relegation group, with the table still carrying real consequences for both clubs. Spartak are fifth on 34 points and remain mathematically alive, but they need this result and help elsewhere to change their fate. Lokomotiv sit second on 47 points, and while their position is much healthier, they still have a job to finish properly.
The mood around both camps suggests a proper contest rather than a routine end-of-season outing. Spartak come in after a big 2-0 away win at Montana, while Lokomotiv arrive on the back of a 2-0 derby victory over Slavia Sofia. With no clear reason to protect players for a later league fixture, both managers should lean close to their strongest available line-ups.
FK Spartak Varna Form & Analysis
Gjoko Hadzievski’s side have at least given themselves a late chance. Their win at Montana was sharp and efficient, and the numbers backed it up: 17 shots, 11 on target, and a clean sheet despite playing much of the match without Umaro Baldé after his red card in the 31st minute. That kind of result matters because Spartak had been patchy before that, losing to Septemvri Sofia and Botev Vratsa, drawing with Dobrudzha, and suffering defeats to Slavia and Beroe in the previous run.
The concern now is whether that momentum can hold with the pressure turned up. Spartak’s home record is modest rather than convincing, with 20 points taken at home and 33 goals conceded in those matches. Their season overall has been built on too many draws and too few clean defensive displays, and the pre-match team news does not help. Captain Angel Granchov is suspended, while Mateo Petrashilo is a doubt after the knee issue picked up at Montana. That points to a reshuffle at the back at exactly the wrong time.
Spartak do at least have one thing going for them: they know this is their last chance, and that can sharpen a team’s edge. If they can force the tempo early and make the game open, they have enough in attack to contribute to a scoreline that suits the over goals angle.
Lokomotiv Sofia Form & Analysis
Aleksandar Georgiev’s team have been one of the steadier sides in the relegation group. The 2-0 win over Slavia made it six matches unbeaten, and although four of those were draws, Lokomotiv have looked organised enough to avoid losing control of games. Their recent results also include a 3-0 win away at Dobrudzha and a 2-2 draw at Montana, which shows they have been able to score on the road as well.
Away from home, Lokomotiv’s record is balanced: five wins, five draws and seven defeats, with 24 goals scored and 25 conceded. That is not the profile of a team that shuts games down completely, and it fits the wider pattern here. Lokomotiv have scored in most of their recent fixtures, but they have also conceded enough to keep matches alive. The suspension of Bozhidar Katsarov, following his straight red against Beroe, is a setback in midfield and could affect how much control they have in the centre of the pitch.
Even so, Lokomotiv’s recent run of six games unbeaten gives them a sturdier look than Spartak. They also know this fixture has caused them trouble in the past, so they should not expect a comfortable afternoon. If Spartak are forced into a more aggressive shape by the table situation, Lokomotiv have the pace and enough attacking quality to punish gaps.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has tended to produce goals. Six of the last eight meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and both teams have found the net in six of those eight as well. The most recent league meeting finished 2-2 in Varna back in February, which is a fair reminder that neither side has been able to fully dominate the other.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
The main call is Over 2.5 Goals at 4/5, with a 51% model probability, and that looks the right side of the line. Spartak need to go for it, Lokomotiv have been scoring regularly, and neither defence inspires much confidence under pressure. A 2-1 home win is the suggested scoreline, but a 2-2 draw would not be a surprise either if the match opens up after the first goal.