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HNK Vukovar 1991 welcome HNK Gorica to the HNL on Wednesday afternoon with the bottom-half tension still hanging over both clubs. Vukovar sit 10th on 24 points, Gorica 8th on 32, so this isn’t just a routine spring fixture — it’s a proper scrap for position, pride and a bit of breathing room before the season reaches its sharp end.
For Tomislav Stipić’s side, the task is straightforward enough. Get points on the board at home and stop the table from tightening around them. For Mario Carević and Gorica, it’s about turning a decent enough league position into something safer after a patchy run that’s threatened to drag them back into the crowd. Their recent meetings have been close too, which only adds to the sense that this one could hinge on a single moment. No one’s running away with it.
Vukovar arrive with a bit of momentum after that 2-1 away win at NK Istra 1961 on 18 April, and they needed it. The game had a bit of everything: a sharp start, some stubborn defending and a late stretch where VAR twice ruled out further goals. Vinko Rozić and Šimun Butić got them in front, Jakov Puljić added a penalty, and for once they saw the job through. Before that, though, the picture was grim. A 1-4 home loss to Dinamo Zagreb was expected in one sense, but the 1-1 draw with Lokomotiva at home showed how often they’ve been stuck just short of turning decent spells into wins. Earlier still came the 0-6 hammering by Hajduk Split at home, which was brutal, and the 0-1 home defeat to Rijeka before that. Three losses in four before the Istra trip. That’s not the profile of a settled side.
At home, Vukovar’s numbers are respectable without being persuasive. They’ve taken 18 points from 15 league matches on their own ground, with four wins, six draws and five defeats. They’ve scored 20 and conceded 27 there, which tells the story neatly enough. They can nick a goal at home, and they’ve done it often enough to stay alive in games, but they don’t control enough of them. The one constant is that they’ve been vulnerable first — they’ve gone behind first in eight straight matches in the broader league trend, and that habit puts them on the back foot far too early. It’s hard work from there. It always is.
There are positives, though. Vukovar haven’t been totally starved of attacking moments, and the league-wide home environment isn’t exactly punishing for chance creation. Their latest away win at Istra showed they can still find periods of menace when the game opens up. Yet the defensive side remains the worry. Conceding 58 in the league is a hefty number, and even at home they’re shipping more than they’d want. You can see why their matches often drift toward both teams scoring or at least a tense, open finish. They don’t keep many clean sheets. In fact, they’ve gone eight league games without one. That’s a long stretch for any side trying to settle itself.
Gorica’s form is wobblier than their league position suggests. They’ve lost their last two, first at home to Lokomotiva on 17 April and then away to Hajduk Split, where they were beaten 1-0 on 12 April. Before that came the 3-6 chaos at home to Dinamo Zagreb in the Croatia Cup, a game that never really stopped racing. The one bright spell in the recent run was the 1-1 draw at Varaždin, and the one genuinely convincing performance before the wobble was the 4-0 home win over Rijeka on 22 March. That result still stands out. Everything around it has been far less stable.
The away record is solid enough to keep them in the top half of the away table, but it’s not the kind of record that should frighten anyone. Three wins, five draws and seven defeats from 15 away league matches, with 15 scored and 21 conceded, says Gorica tend to be competitive without being ruthless. They don’t travel badly in the sense that they fall apart, but they also don’t impose themselves. A 0-0 at Osijek and a 1-1 at Varaždin show the sort of controlled, cautious away performances they can produce. The trouble is that they’ve now gone four without a league win, and that’s starting to bite. Can they keep it tight for another 90 minutes? That’s the question.
Carević will want more from the front line, because the away goals return is modest and the recent chance creation has been poor. Against Lokomotiva, they managed only 0.25 xG and just one shot on target. That’s anaemic. They had slightly more going on in the cup against Dinamo, but the game still slid away from them because the defensive structure was stretched and the match became a shootout they couldn’t win. The clean sheet against Rijeka showed what they can do when compact and organised. The problem is that version of Gorica hasn’t shown up often enough on the road. Still, with 34 league goals scored and only 42 conceded overall, they’ve got a more balanced profile than Vukovar. That should matter here.
There’s a recent pattern worth paying attention to, and it’s a tight one. The last three league meetings have all ended level: 0-0 at Gorica in February, 1-1 at Gorica in November, and 2-2 in Vukovar back in August. That’s not a coincidence. These sides have found it difficult to separate each other, and neither has really managed to impose a clear identity in the matchup.
Go a bit further back and Gorica were the stronger side in the older 1. NL meetings, but that feels like a different era now. The more relevant detail is the recent run: no losses for Vukovar in the last three against Gorica, no losses for Gorica in the last five overall in the fixture. It’s a draw-friendly pairing. Three straight stalemates in the league don’t just happen by chance.
We’re backing Double Chance X2 at 2/5 here, and it’s the cleanest angle on the game. Gorica aren’t in great nick, but they’re still the more established side, they’re above Vukovar in the table, and their away record isn’t weak enough to trust against. Vukovar’s home form is decent without being convincing, and that first-to-concede trend is a real problem when you’re asking them to manage a result.
The recent head-to-head draws are the big clue. These sides know how to cancel each other out, but Gorica have just a little more class and a slightly better defensive base across the season. The xG projection is close — 1.1 for Vukovar, 1.3 for Gorica — and that fits a narrow away edge. A 1-2 away win is the call, though a lower-scoring draw wouldn’t shock anyone. If you wanted a safer alternative, under 3.5 goals has a decent case too.
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