Lokomotiv Sofia host Beroe Stara Zagora on Thursday evening in the First Professional League’s relegation round, with both sides trying to finish the season on a high and keep the mood alive after a long, awkward campaign. Lokomotiv are sitting much healthier in the overall table, second on 43 points, but the job isn’t finished yet. Beroe are down in fourth on 33 points and still carrying the scars of a season that’s been too leaky at the back and too patchy in attack.
This one comes with a bit of recent edge, too. The teams met only a month ago, and Lokomotiv came through 2-1 in Sofia. Before that, they’d also beaten Beroe 3-1 in Stara Zagora in November. That recent trend matters because these sides know each other well, and Lokomotiv have been the sharper, more reliable outfit in the head-to-head. Beroe’s current run is decent, mind you. They’ve won their last outing and have gone five without defeat. That won’t scare Lokomotiv. Not much, anyway.
Lokomotiv, though, haven’t exactly been coasting into this game. They’ve drawn too many matches, and while the results have kept them moving, they’ve also left the impression of a side that’s been just a touch too easy to live with. The question here is simple: can they turn territorial control into a clean win, or will Beroe drag them into another messy, open contest?
Lokomotiv Sofia Form & Analysis
Lokomotiv’s last six tell the story of a side that’s hard to beat but not quite ruthless enough to put games away cleanly. They started this spell with a lively 2-2 draw away at PFK Montana 1921 on 9 May, and that result came after a 2-2 home draw with Botev Vratsa on 5 May. Before that, they’d got the job done properly with a 3-0 away win at FK Dobrudzha Dobrich, which looked like the sort of performance that could kick-start a strong finish. Instead, they followed it with another home draw, 1-1 against FK Septemvri Sofia, and then you have to go back to mid-April for their last defeat, a 3-2 away loss to Botev Vratsa. That’s four unbeaten now. Solid. Not spectacular.
There’s a clear pattern in the way Lokomotiv are playing. They score. They also give chances away. Their home record sums it up neatly: five wins, eight draws and four defeats from 17 league matches at their own ground, with 24 scored and 19 conceded. That’s not the profile of a side that locks games down. It’s the profile of a team that tends to get involved in them. You’d fancy them to create enough here, especially against a Beroe defence that’s spent much of the season shipping goals. But the clean sheet? That’s a different matter. Lokomotiv have only just enough control to suggest they’ll get on the scoresheet, not enough to guarantee Beroe are kept quiet.
Aleksandar Georgiev’s side have also been drifting along in a fairly familiar rhythm at home: useful enough in possession, usually good for a goal, but rarely fully secure. The 2-2 with Botev Vratsa and 1-1 against Septemvri Sofia fit that script perfectly. Even their win at Dobrudzha came with attacking intent rather than defensive dominance. That makes them dangerous in a BTTS-type match. It also means they’re vulnerable if the game becomes stretched. And against Beroe, that’s exactly the danger.
Beroe Stara Zagora Form & Analysis
Beroe arrive with more momentum than their league position might suggest. Their last six have brought three wins, two draws and only one defeat, which is a perfectly decent return. They opened this sequence with a 1-0 away win at FK Dobrudzha Dobrich on 10 May, where Yesid Valbuena settled it in the 75th minute. Before that came a 2-2 home draw with PFK Montana 1921, then a big 3-0 home win over Slavia Sofia. Go back a bit further and you find a 2-1 away win at FK Spartak Varna, plus a goalless draw at home to Lokomotiv Plovdiv. The only blemish came in the 2-1 defeat at home to Lokomotiv Sofia on 9 April. Since then, they’ve gone five without losing. That’s a proper response.
Still, their away numbers leave plenty of room for doubt. Beroe’s league away record reads four wins, five draws and eight defeats, with 14 goals scored and 25 conceded. That’s a blunt warning. They’re competitive on the road, but they’re not trustworthy. The problem is obvious enough: they don’t score often enough away from home, and when the game opens up, they’re too easy to punish. One goal at Dobrudzha was enough last time out. Here, in Sofia, they’ll likely need more. Can they supply it? That’s the question.
Jesus Uribesalgo Gutierrez will be pleased with the recent resilience. Beroe are no longer folding at the first setback, and the wins over Slavia and Spartak Varna suggest there’s some attacking punch there when they get the right type of game. But the away split is still the concern. Four wins sounds respectable until you see the eight defeats and the 25 goals conceded. That’s a side that tends to let matches drift away from it outside Stara Zagora. Lokomotiv are precisely the sort of opponent who can take advantage. They don’t need a lot of encouragement.
Head-to-Head
Lokomotiv have had Beroe’s number for a while now. The most recent meeting was that 2-1 Lokomotiv win on 9 April, and before that they won 3-1 in Stara Zagora in November. Go back further and the pattern keeps favouring the home side in this fixture, with Lokomotiv winning 2-1, 3-0, 1-0 and 1-0 across several previous league meetings, while the lone Beroe success in that stretch came way back in November 2022.
There’s also a clear flavour to these games. They’re rarely dead. Four of the last five have gone over 2.5 goals, and Beroe haven’t kept Lokomotiv quiet often enough to make that trend feel accidental. Lokomotiv have won three of the last eight meetings and, more importantly, they’ve not lost any of the last seven in this matchup. That sort of edge matters. It’s the kind of history that sticks in the head when the game starts to feel tight.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/5 for this one. It’s the best fit for the shape of the match, and it’s not hard to see why. Lokomotiv have scored in nearly every direction lately, but they’ve also been conceding too often, especially in games that become open after the first goal. Beroe, for their part, have found a bit of rhythm going forward and have scored in enough of their recent matches to make a clean Lokomotiv shutout feel optimistic.
The 2-1 scoreline feels the right call. Lokomotiv’s stronger home record, better league position and their recent edge in this fixture tip the balance their way, but Beroe’s five-game unbeaten run makes a home clean sheet look unlikely. If you want an alternative, over 2.5 goals has a live case given the recent head-to-head trend, though BTTS is the cleaner angle here.