

Match form loads a moment after the page opens so the main prediction can appear first; recent results are fetched right after.
FK Vojvodina welcome FK Partizan to Novi Sad on Wednesday evening in the Mozzart Bet Superliga Championship Round, and this one carries real weight at the sharp end of the season. Partizan sit second on 64 points, Vojvodina are just behind in third on 62, and with only two points separating them, this feels less like a routine league fixture and more like a direct swing in the race for the top places. There’s pride on the line too. These are two of Serbia’s most familiar heavyweights, and neither will want to give ground this late on.
The timing adds a sharp edge. Vojvodina won the reverse meeting 3-0 in Belgrade on 8 March, a result that rattled Partizan and told everyone they’re no pushovers at all. Yet Partizan have also responded well since then, putting together a five-match unbeaten run before turning over Železničar Pančevo 2-1 last time out. That’s the tension here: Vojvodina’s home strength against Partizan’s league position and recent resilience. Something has to give.
Vojvodina arrive having taken a bit of a knock at Crvena zvezda last Friday, going down 4-1 in a game that got away from them after Siniša Tanjga was sent off on 20 minutes. That was a brutal afternoon. They’d barely settled when they were chasing the game, and once Zvezda got on top, the scoreline became ugly. Before that, though, there was plenty to like about their run. They beat Radnički Niš 3-2 at home, drew 0-0 away to IMT Beograd, then thumped Napredak Kruševac 4-1 at home and edged Radnički 1923 1-0 away. The headline from that stretch is simple: they’ve been finding ways to win, and often by playing on the front foot.
At their own ground, Vojvodina have been excellent. Ten wins, three draws and only two defeats, with 35 goals scored and just 16 conceded, is the sort of home record that keeps a team in the title conversation or, at the very least, well inside the top three. They’re not just grinding out results either. They’re scoring at a healthy clip, and the 3-2 win over Radnički Niš and 4-1 success against Napredak showed they can turn home matches into proper shoots. That’s a danger for Partizan. Vojvodina don’t need many invitations.
There’s also a clear pattern running through their recent work. They’ve scored in plenty of bursts, they’ve looked strong when games open up, and they’ve already shown they can hurt Partizan badly. That 3-0 win on 8 March wasn’t a fluke. It was a statement. The one concern, and it’s not small, is what happens when they’re forced to defend deeper for long spells. Zvezda exposed them when the game turned chaotic, and against a stronger attacking side than most, that’s always a risk. Still, in Novi Sad, they’ve earned the right to be trusted.
Partizan’s recent form has been steadier than Vojvodina’s, even if it hasn’t always been pretty. They beat Železničar Pančevo 2-1 at home in their last outing, having already outlasted Novi Pazar in a wild 3-2 away win on 9 April. Before that, they were held 0-0 by Čukarički at home and 1-1 by Mladost Lučani on the road, but they had also beaten TSC Bačka Topola 2-1. Strip it back and the picture is clear enough: they’re hard to beat, they keep showing up in games, and they’ve avoided the kind of collapse that would have damaged their season badly.
Away from home, Partizan’s record is strong but not flawless. Nine wins, two draws and four defeats is a good return, and 33 goals scored on the road tells you they don’t go into away matches just to survive. They’ll have the ball for long periods, they can create chances, and they’ve been willing to go after opponents on the road. The flip side? They’ve conceded 26 away goals, which is a chunky number for a side chasing the top end. That gives Vojvodina hope. If Partizan open the game up, they can be hit.
Mind you, their unbeaten run since the defeat to Vojvodina in March has changed the mood around them. Five matches without loss is steady enough, and it’s telling that even when they’re not flying, they’re still finding a way to avoid defeat. That said, the draw at Čukarički and the messy 2-3 loss at Novi Pazar showed the cracks. They aren’t impermeable. In a game like this, where the opponent has already beaten them once and knows it can hurt them, that matters. Partizan will need to be cleaner than they were in Novi Sad a few weeks ago.
This fixture has been far from one-sided in recent seasons. Vojvodina’s 3-0 win in Belgrade on 8 March stands out because it was so emphatic, but it sits inside a broader sequence that’s been competitive and, at times, tense. Partizan won 1-0 at home in October 2025 and edged a 3-2 thriller in May, while the two sides also shared goalless draws in February 2025 and September 2024. Back in May 2024, Vojvodina went to Belgrade and won 3-2. There’s no fear factor here. Not for either side.
What does stand out is the edge these meetings have had, even when the scorelines aren’t wild. Several recent clashes have been tight, and the cards have often piled up. That’s no surprise given the stakes and the history. These teams know each other well, and they rarely leave the pitch without a few bruises. Expect friction. Expect spells of control to swing back and forth. This one won’t be neat.
We’re backing FK Vojvodina to win at 11/8 here. It’s a bold call on paper with Partizan second in the table and five games unbeaten before this trip, but Vojvodina’s home record is too strong to ignore, and they’ve already shown they can bully Partizan when the mood takes them. Their 3-0 win in March wasn’t a one-off smash-and-grab; it came from a side that’s scored heavily at home all season and concedes very little there. That combination gives them the edge.
A 2-1 home win looks the likeliest outcome. Partizan should create enough to get on the scoresheet, especially with 33 away goals behind them, but Vojvodina have been better at home in the big moments and should find a way through. If you wanted a smaller angle, Vojvodina to score first has appeal too. They’ve done that regularly enough, and in a game this tight, the opening goal could be half the battle.
League and venue; tap a row for the match page.
League
Range
Venue
No matches for these filters.
No matches for these filters.
Percentages from finished games after filters (1X2, goals, BTTS).
League
Range
Venue