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Levski Sofia host Ludogorets on Saturday evening in the First Professional League Championship Round, and this one carries real weight at both ends of the table. Levski are top of the pile on 76 points and know a win would strengthen their grip on first place, while Ludogorets arrive third on 60 and need a result to stay alive in the title conversation. There’s no room for drift now. Every point matters.
This is also a meeting between two sides who’ve already spent plenty of time trying to crack each other this season. Ludogorets have had the better of the direct duels, but Levski are in a stronger overall position and have turned their home ground into a serious advantage. That tension matters. One team has the historical edge in the matchup, the other has the table and the home record on its side.
The wider backdrop is simple enough. Levski are trying to close out a fine campaign from the top, while Ludogorets are chasing the sort of run that keeps a championship race honest. For both managers, Julio Velazquez and Per Mathias Hogmo, this isn’t just about style or control. It’s about who can handle the pressure, and who blinks first.
Levski come into this on a tidy run, and they’ve earned the right to feel confident. Their last six league and championship-round matches read like a side that knows how to grind out points without losing its shape. They beat Cherno More Varna 2-1 at home, drew 2-2 away at FK Dobrudzha Dobrich, then saw off Arda Kardzhali 1-0 at home before landing a big away win over CSKA Sofia, 3-1 on 25 April. After a 1-1 draw with CSKA Sofia earlier in April, they kept the momentum going by edging FC CSKA 1948 Sofia 1-0 at home on 2 May.
That’s eight games unbeaten overall, and it’s not a flimsy run built on escapes. Levski have been consistent at both ends of the pitch and, at home, they’ve been excellent all season: 14 wins, one draw and just one defeat from 16 league matches at their ground. They’ve scored 39 and conceded only nine there. That’s elite home form by any standard. No nonsense. No fuss. They’re hard to score against in Sofia, and they usually do just enough at the other end.
The defensive numbers are especially hard to ignore. Levski have conceded only 23 league goals all season, which is the sort of record that usually keeps you near the top. At home, they’ve made opponents work for every scrap. They’re also more than capable of striking first — that matters in a game like this, because once Levski go ahead, they know how to manage the rest. The 1-0 win over FC CSKA 1948 Sofia last time out, sealed by Marko Dugandžić after Adama Ardile Traoré’s red card, was a good example: disciplined, practical, and good enough.
Ludogorets’ recent form tells a very different story. They’ve dropped into a rough patch at exactly the wrong time, and the results have dried up fast. Their last six reads like a team searching for rhythm and not finding it. They were beaten 1-0 away at CSKA Sofia on 3 May in the championship round, drew 0-0 away at the same ground in the Bulgarian Cup a few days earlier, lost 2-1 at home to FC CSKA 1948 Sofia, then went down 2-1 to CSKA Sofia again in the cup. Before that came a 1-0 defeat away to Arda Kardzhali and a goalless home draw with Cherno More Varna.
That’s six games without a win. It’s a poor run for a club used to setting the pace, and the worrying part is how limited they’ve looked going forward. They’ve managed just two goals across those six matches, while failing to score in three of them. You can argue the fixtures have been awkward, sure, but good teams find a way through those stretches. Ludogorets haven’t. They’ve been blunt, and when they’ve fallen behind, they’ve struggled to pull themselves back.
Away from home, their league record is respectable on paper: eight wins, four draws and four defeats, with 29 goals scored and 12 conceded. That suggests a side with enough quality to travel well. Yet form matters more than season totals when a title chase tightens, and right now Ludogorets don’t look like a team bursting with confidence. Per Mathias Hogmo will want more control in possession and more aggression in the final third, because relying on scraps at Levski’s ground is a dangerous plan. Can they sharpen up in time? That’s the question.
This fixture has leaned Ludogorets’ way recently, and that’s part of what makes it so awkward for Levski despite the league table telling a different story. Ludogorets beat Levski 1-0 on 5 March, then repeated that scoreline in the Bulgarian Cup on 11 February and in the Bulgarian Supercup on 3 February. Three straight wins, all tight, all controlled. Levski have found it difficult to break them down.
The broader pattern is similar. The sides drew 0-0 at Levski’s ground in September, split a 2-2 draw in May 2025 at the same venue, and have been involved in plenty of low-margin meetings. Five of the last six head-to-heads have finished with under 2.5 goals. This rivalry has become a cagey one. Not much breathing space. Not much charity.
We’re backing Levski Sofia to win this at 1/1, and that price looks fair enough. If you want to widen the search beyond this pick, our UK betting sites page pulls together our UK-facing bookmaker shortlist if you want the broader site comparison around this bet. Their home record is the strongest single angle in the match: 14 wins from 16, only nine goals conceded, and a habit of controlling games on their own turf. Ludogorets arrive with better recent head-to-head results, yes, but their current form is the killer here. Six without a win is a serious problem, especially when they’ve been so short of goals.
The cleanest read is that Levski edge a tight game, probably 2-1. That fits the numbers and the mood of the fixture. Ludogorets have still got enough quality to nick something if Levski switch off, but the home side look more settled, more efficient and far harder to rattle. If you wanted a secondary angle, under 2.5 goals has a strong historical case in this matchup. Still, the home win is the play. Levski should have enough.
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