HNK Gorica welcome NK Osijek to the HNL on Saturday evening with both sides stuck in the lower half and trying to finish the season with some dignity intact. Gorica sit 8th on 38 points, three better off than Osijek in 9th, and while neither club is staring at relegation danger, there’s still plenty riding on this one. Pride matters. So does momentum. In a tight table, that’s often enough to make a late-season meeting feel bigger than the positions suggest.
For Mario Carević’s side, the attraction is simple: win here and they can put a little daylight between themselves and the pack below while ending a frustrating run on a more positive note. Osijek, under Tomislav Radotić, need points even more urgently if they’re to climb away from the bottom end of the division’s middle tier. Their away record gives them a fighting chance, but their recent attacking output has been thin. Very thin.
This is also a game shaped by recent familiarity. These two have already met three times this season in league action, and the pattern has been stubbornly tight. Osijek drew 0-0 at home in March, the reverse fixture in September ended 1-0 to Osijek, and there was a 1-1 draw back in December. That sort of history doesn’t promise fireworks. Quite the opposite.
HNK Gorica Form & Analysis
Gorica arrive here on the back of a stop-start stretch that tells you exactly where they are right now: competitive, awkward to face, but not especially reliable. They lost 1-0 away to Slaven Belupo on 10 May, and the game had that familiar feel of a side struggling to turn decent spells into real damage. Their xG of 0.32 was poor, they managed only six shots, and they didn’t force enough problems. Before that, they were beaten 2-1 at home by Dinamo Zagreb, a match in which they did at least find the net, but conceding twice again meant the effort went unrewarded.
There was some encouragement before those defeats. Gorica beat Istra 1-0 at home on 27 April, which followed a 2-1 away win over Vukovar 1991. That brief lift was always likely to be fragile, though, because their season has been built on moments rather than control. Earlier still, they fell 2-0 at home to Lokomotiva and lost 1-0 away to Hajduk Split. So the picture is pretty clear. They’re capable of staying in games, but they don’t often take charge of them. One win in their last four league outings. That’s not strong enough.
At home, Gorica’s numbers are decent without being intimidating. Six wins, three draws and eight losses at their ground, with 21 goals scored and 23 conceded, paints a side that usually has a puncher’s chance but rarely overwhelms opponents. They’ve scored in bursts rather than steadily, and the defensive record says they’re vulnerable whenever the game opens up. Still, this venue hasn’t been a total write-off. They’re organised enough to make life uncomfortable, and if they keep things tight early, they’ll fancy nicking a result. The problem is that “nick a result” is very much their ceiling.
NK Osijek Form & Analysis
Osijek’s recent form is even harder to love from an attacking perspective. Their last outing was a 1-0 home loss to Istra on 10 May, and the numbers were mild rather than disastrous: 11 shots, four on target, xG of 0.56. The issue wasn’t total collapse. It was the same old lack of edge. They created just enough to suggest they should’ve done better, then walked away empty-handed anyway. That’s been a recurring theme.
Before that, they were beaten 1-0 away at Vukovar 1991, which followed a 0-0 draw with Lokomotiva at home. Go back a little further and there was a neat away win over Hajduk Split, plus a 0-2 home defeat to Varaždin and another 0-2 win away at Rijeka. That’s the odd thing about Osijek. They can still pull off a result on the road. They’re not dead in the water. But the consistency isn’t there, and the front line has gone cold at the worst possible time.
The away record offers some encouragement for Radotić’s men. Four wins, four draws and nine losses on the road is hardly glamorous, yet it’s better than the record of a side completely out of its depth, and the 15 goals scored away from home show they’ve been able to find moments away from their own ground. The catch is the defensive figure: 28 conceded on the road. That’s a soft underbelly. They can travel, but they don’t travel safely. The current run also matters. Osijek are winless in three, and they haven’t scored in three straight league matches. That’s the sort of streak that changes the mood in a dressing room very quickly.
Still, you wouldn’t dismiss them. They’ve got a better away profile than their overall table position suggests, and they’ve already shown this season that they can frustrate Gorica. The problem is whether they have enough to go and win it. On recent evidence, that looks like a stretch.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been cagey for a while. The last four league meetings have produced just five goals in total, and three of the last four ended level or by a single-goal margin. In March, Osijek and Gorica played out a goalless draw in Osijek. Before that, Osijek edged the September meeting 1-0 at home, while December finished 1-1. Gorica did beat Osijek 1-0 at home in April 2025, so there’s no clear home advantage to lean on.
The broader pattern is simple enough. These teams don’t give each other much space, and the margin has been tiny more often than not. Six of the last six meetings have stayed under 2.5 goals. That’s not a fluke anymore.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
We’re backing Double Chance X2 at 8/13 here. It’s not glamorous, but it’s the sensible call. Osijek have their flaws, plenty of them, yet Gorica haven’t been convincing enough to justify short prices on the home side. The away team’s current three-game winless run is a concern, but their road record still carries a bit more substance than Gorica’s home authority. Put bluntly, this feels like a draw or an Osijek edge.
The scoreline call is 1-1. That fits the recent history between these clubs, the low-key attacking output from both camps, and the xG projection, which points to a tight, scrappy affair rather than a wide-open one. If you want a slightly bolder angle, under 2.5 goals has obvious appeal given the head-to-head trend and Osijek’s lack of goals.