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IF Elfsborg host Djurgårdens IF in Allsvenskan on Wednesday evening, 22 April 2026, in a meeting that already feels like an early check on both clubs’ ambitions. Elfsborg are sitting third after taking seven points from their first three league games, and Björn Hamberg’s side have started with enough composure to suggest they’re serious about staying near the top. Djurgården are a place behind in seventh, one point worse off, and Jani Honkavaara’s team need a result to stop their season drifting into that awkward middle ground where the table looks fine on paper but the momentum isn’t there.
There’s also a neat contrast in how they’ve arrived here. Elfsborg have been steady, awkward to beat and usually decisive when they get in front. Djurgården have been a bit more erratic: a strong win at GAIS, a wild home victory over Kalmar FF, then a flat defeat to Malmö FF last time out. That sort of profile tends to produce tight markets, but the goal numbers point the other way. This could be a proper open game.
Elfsborg’s recent run has a decent shape to it. They opened the league season with a professional 2-0 home win over IFK Göteborg, then followed it with a useful 2-2 draw away at Västerås SK. After that came a 1-0 away win at Degerfors IF on 17 April, sealed by Julius Magnusson’s second-half goal. Three league games unbeaten, two wins from three, and the one draw came in a match where they still found enough to score twice on the road. That’s a solid start. Not flashy, just effective.
The broader picture is just as encouraging. They’ve gone five matches unbeaten since that March cup defeat to IK Sirius, and in that stretch they’ve found ways to win different types of games. The 3-1 friendly win over Östers IF and the 3-2 home success against AIK show they can turn matches into something a bit more chaotic when needed, while the league wins have looked more controlled. The only concern is that they haven’t quite put a lid on games at home. Against IFK Göteborg, they were comfortable. Against opposition with more punch, the margins may shrink fast.
At home in the league, though, the numbers are clean. Elfsborg have one win from one at Borås Arena, with two goals scored and none conceded. That’s an early sample, of course, but it tells you what kind of evening Djurgården are likely to face. Elfsborg don’t need many chances to get their noses in front, and their pattern in this fixture is even more revealing: they’ve scored first in five of their last six. If they do that again here, the visitors will have to chase. That’s when this gets lively.
Djurgården’s form has a bit more wobble in it. Their last league outing was a narrow 1-0 home loss to Malmö FF, a game where they actually had plenty of the ball and more shots, but couldn’t turn territory into a goal. Before that, they edged Kalmar FF 3-2 at home in a game that refused to settle, and on 6 April they won 1-0 away at GAIS. Those results tell a simple story: when Djurgården are sharp, they can nick games. When they’re not, they can look strangely blunt.
That home defeat to Malmö also exposed the edge of their profile. They had 20 shots to Malmö’s five and still lost. That’s not a great sign. It says the final ball isn’t always there, and it also says they can be undone by one moment if they fail to make pressure count. Still, there’s enough attacking threat in the side to keep opponents honest. They’ve scored in each of their last two league matches, and the 3-2 win over Kalmar showed they can get into a shootout if the game opens up.
On the road, though, they’ve been tidy. Their only league away match so far ended in a 1-0 win at GAIS, which means they’ve got a perfect away record in the league, albeit from one game and one game only. That’s not much of a sample, but it’s still worth respecting. The problem is that they’ve generally looked more vulnerable when faced with an organised side in a proper league setting. You can see why Honkavaara will want control here, but control isn’t always available away from home. Especially not against Elfsborg, who tend to start quickly and force opponents into decisions.
These two have produced a few odd swings in recent meetings. Djurgården beat Elfsborg 1-0 in Stockholm last July, but Elfsborg replied in style with a 4-0 home win in May 2025. Go back a bit further and the pattern gets even noisier: Djurgården won 2-0 at home in May 2024, then Elfsborg thumped them 4-0 in Stockholm in July 2023. That’s the kind of rivalry that rarely settles into one rhythm for long.
The one angle that stands out is goals at Borås. Elfsborg’s big home win in this fixture last season is hard to ignore, and it fits the way they’ve started this campaign at home. Djurgården haven’t been shy in attack, but they’ve also shown enough fragility for a game with chances at both ends. This one doesn’t feel like a cagey repeat of the 1-0s.
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 5/6 for this one. The price is fair enough, but the bigger reason is the shape of both sides. Elfsborg have already mixed control with threat, Djurgården have been involved in games that swing around quickly, and neither defence looks set to dominate for long stretches. If Elfsborg score first — and they’ve made a habit of doing exactly that — the match should open up fast.
The projected 2-1 scoreline fits the balance nicely. Elfsborg’s home form is strong, Djurgården have enough going forward to get on the board, and the xG projection of 1.5 to 1.3 points to a match with clear chances at both ends. A 1-1 draw wouldn’t shock anyone, but Elfsborg’s sharper start to the league campaign gives them the edge. If you want a smaller alternative, Elfsborg to score first has a live feel to it.
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