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Lokomotiv Sofia welcome Botev Vratsa to the capital on Tuesday evening, 5 May 2026, in the First Professional League’s Relegation Round, with both sides still needing points to steady themselves in a tense section of the season. It’s the kind of game that can change the mood around a camp very quickly. Win it and the pressure eases. Lose it and the questions start again.
For Lokomotiv Sofia, this is a chance to build on a sharp away win at FK Dobrudzha Dobrich on 1 May, a 3-0 result that gave Asen Georgiev’s side a bit of breathing space after a patchy spell. Botev Vratsa arrive with a similar sense of urgency, though their 2-1 home win over FK Spartak Varna on 2 May has lifted them too. In a relegation round, momentum matters almost as much as points. This one feels like it could swing either way, and both managers will know how valuable a clean, controlled performance would be.
There’s also a little backstory here. These sides met only weeks ago, when Botev Vratsa edged Lokomotiv 3-2 on 14 April. That result is hard to ignore. Lokomotiv will want revenge, while Botev will point to the fact they’ve already found a way through this opponent’s defence. Expect a lively, slightly nervy contest rather than a cagey one.
Lokomotiv Sofia come into this with a mixed but increasingly live recent run. Their latest outing was the one that matters most for confidence: a 3-0 away win over FK Dobrudzha Dobrich on 1 May, delivered with early bite and a late third goal to seal it. Before that, they were held 1-1 at home by FK Septemvri Sofia on 27 April, a match that felt a little flat after the energy of their 2-1 home win over Beroe Stara Zagora on 9 April. Sandwiched around that were defeats to Botev Vratsa and Lokomotiv Plovdiv, plus a 3-2 loss at FC CSKA 1948 Sofia. Three of their last six have finished with at least three goals. That’s not a coincidence.
The recent pattern for Lokomotiv is pretty clear: they’re dangerous going forward, but they rarely coast through a match. Against Dobrudzha, they were efficient enough to kill the game off early, with Caue Caruzo Alves striking on 9 minutes, Bozhidar Katsarov doubling the lead eight minutes later, and Adil Taoui adding the third in the second half. That’s the sort of start they’ll want here too. The flip side? They’ve conceded in five of their last six, and when they’re dragged into open games, they don’t always manage the control phase very well. A late red card for Reyan Daskalov in the win at Dobrudzha also hints at a side that can get a little stretched when protecting a lead.
At home, Lokomotiv’s season has been respectable rather than dominant, but their attacking numbers at the ground are good enough to keep them in the game against most opponents. They’ve been scoring regularly in Sofia, and the broader trend is that they’re far more effective when the match gets played at a decent tempo. That suits them here, because a slow, shut-down contest doesn’t really play to their strengths. They need movement, pressure and a bit of chaos in the final third. Without that, they can drift.
Botev Vratsa arrive with a slightly more stable recent run, though they’re still far from convincing. Their last six have included a 2-1 home win over FK Spartak Varna on 2 May, a 1-1 draw away to Slavia Sofia on 26 April, and that earlier 3-2 win over Lokomotiv Sofia on 14 April. But the same sequence also contains a 1-0 defeat at FC CSKA 1948 Sofia, a goalless draw at FK Septemvri Sofia and a 2-1 home loss to Lokomotiv Plovdiv. That’s a side that can compete, can score, but can’t quite trust itself for 90 minutes. Three of those six matches ended level or within a single goal. They’re usually in the game. They’re not always on the right side of it.
The away form is the concern. Botev Vratsa have been resilient on the road in patches, and the draw at Slavia was a decent result, but they’ve still struggled to put together convincing away performances. Their level drops when they’re forced to defend long spells without the ball. They don’t shut games down cleanly, and that leaves them exposed when teams start moving the ball quickly in and around the box. Still, they’ve shown enough threat to trouble Lokomotiv again. Mitchy Ntelo and Tamimou Ouorou both scored early against Spartak Varna, while Tsvetelin Chunchukov added a penalty later on. They’re not short of a goal threat when the service arrives.
Todor Simov’s side have also developed a habit of finding one side of the pitch easier than the other: they can be sharp in moments, but they don’t consistently control space. That’s why they’ve had to live on fine margins. They’ve gone four matches without a clean sheet, and that keeps BTTS in the conversation every time they step up. If they score first, they become awkward opponents. If they fall behind, the game tends to open up. Either way, it rarely stays tidy for long.
This fixture has leaned Lokomotiv’s way more often than not over the longer stretch, but the most recent meeting is the one that sticks in the mind. Botev Vratsa beat Lokomotiv Sofia 3-2 on 14 April 2026, a match that followed a familiar pattern for both teams: goals, momentum swings and a finish that stayed alive right to the end. That result matters because it confirmed Botev can hurt Lokomotiv when the game gets stretched.
The broader history between these two has been uneven, with Lokomotiv claiming a 3-0 home win in May 2025 and a 3-0 away win in February 2025, while Botev also nicked a 1-0 home victory in November 2025. That’s a useful reminder that neither side has a monopoly on this matchup. The one trend that does keep showing up is goals. Five of the last seven meetings have seen both teams score, and that fits the feel of this pairing rather neatly.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/5 for this one. Our accumulator betting guide is a useful companion here because it breaks down accumulator betting including how to build combos without padding the slip. It’s the cleaner angle, and it fits the shape of both teams right now. Lokomotiv have scored in bursts, Botev have scored in almost every recent match that’s been competitive, and neither defence has looked remotely bulletproof. That’s the core of it.
The 3-2 meeting on 14 April is the obvious pointer, but it’s not just about one game. Lokomotiv have been involved in a run of open fixtures, while Botev have gone four without a clean sheet. Add in the xG projection of 1.4 to 1.1 and a 1-1 correct-score call starts to look very live. That feels about right. If you want a slightly bolder angle, over 2.5 goals has some appeal too, but BTTS gives you the better blend of price and logic here.
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