MFK Karviná host SK Sigma Olomouc on Saturday evening in the second leg of the Czech First League qualification playoffs, with both sides chasing a place in the next phase of the end-of-season scramble. This is the sort of fixture that tends to drag every loose nerve to the surface. One mistake, one missed chance, one late goal — and the whole tie can swing.
Karviná arrive with the better mood after nicking a 2-1 away win at FK Pardubice on 10 May, a result that flips the pressure back onto Sigma. Pavel Hapal’s men, by contrast, were beaten 2-0 at home by Bohemians Praha 1905 on the same day and now have to respond on the road. There’s no league table to hide behind here. It’s straight knockout football, and that usually means the team who can keep scoring has the edge.
The first leg already told us a fair bit. Sigma were good enough to create chances against Bohemians in their recent playoff run, but they couldn’t turn that into a positive result last weekend. Karviná, meanwhile, have shown a knack for making games messy and alive, which is exactly what you want when you’re trying to land a BTTS play. Can they do it again under pressure? That’s the big question.
MFK Karviná Form & Analysis
Karviná’s recent run has had a bit of everything. They were beaten 2-1 at home by Pardubice in the opening playoff leg on 2 May, and that result could easily have rattled them. Instead, they went to Pardubice a week later and came back with a 2-1 away win of their own. That was a proper response. Before that, there was a 3-0 home loss to Mladá Boleslav in the league, which was a blunt reminder that they’re not a side you trust blindly at the back. But they had already shown some grit in late April and mid-April, edging Baník Ostrava 2-1 in the cup and beating Dukla Praha 2-1 away before that. The home win over FC Slovan Liberec, 3-1 on 12 April, was another sign that they can hurt teams when the game opens up.
That pattern matters. Karviná don’t need a lot to get into a match, and once they’re there, they tend to make it uncomfortable. Their last six have produced wins, losses, then wins again — a proper rollercoaster, and not one you’d call stable. Still, they’ve scored in five of those six, and their last outing in Pardubice came with strong underlying numbers too: 2.27 expected goals, five big chances and 14 shots. That wasn’t a smash-and-grab. They were on top. The late missed penalty from Jakub Křišťan didn’t matter in the end, but it underlined how much they were pushing for more.
At home, though, the picture is a bit shakier. Karviná’s home league record this season reads six wins, four draws and seven losses, with 22 goals scored and 24 conceded. That’s not the platform of a side that shuts games down. It’s the platform of a side that stays in them. The numbers are plain enough: they’re capable of scoring, but they’re rarely secure for long. And that’s why they’ve gone without a clean sheet in a long stretch — the back door keeps swinging open. For a BTTS bet, that’s ideal. For Marek Jarolim, it’s a headache.
SK Sigma Olomouc Form & Analysis
Sigma’s recent form has been just as uneven, only in a different way. They beat Bohemians 3-1 away on 2 May, and that looked like the kind of result that could steady the ship. Instead, they’ve since lost 2-0 at home to the same opponents in the playoff return. Before that, there was a narrow 2-1 defeat at Slavia Praha, which is no disgrace on paper, but the problem is the pattern around it. They beat Slovácko 2-1 at home on 19 April, yes, but they’d already lost 4-2 at home to Mladá Boleslav and gone down 2-1 away at Pardubice. That’s too many games where the margins have slipped away from them. Too many.
The positive for Sigma is that they do carry a threat. Pavel Hapal’s side have scored in four of their last six, and even in defeat they’ve often made a decent fist of the attacking side of things. Their home loss to Bohemians on 10 May didn’t come because they sat back and did nothing — they created 1.72 xG from 16 shots and hit the target three times. The finishing just wasn’t there, and the late goal they conceded at 118 minutes hurt the final impression. In raw chance creation, there’s enough here to believe they’ll get opportunities in Karviná too.
Away from home, Sigma’s record is mixed but not dead. They’ve won enough on the road to show they’re no strangers to away goals, and their 3-1 victory at Bohemians in the first playoff leg was the best recent example. That said, their away defensive record is thin, and they’ve gone without a clean sheet in several straight away trips. They concede chances. They concede goals. And when they meet a Karviná side that’s been involved in open games all spring, that usually points one way. This won’t be tidy. It rarely is with Sigma on the road.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings between these two back up the sense that both attacks should find room. Their last eight clashes have produced a nice split of results, but the key thread is that neither side has often managed to keep the other out for long. In the most recent meeting, Sigma and Karviná drew 2-2 in Olomouc on 15 March 2026. Before that came a 1-1 draw in Karviná on 18 October 2025, and Karviná also won 2-1 away at Sigma in April 2025. It’s been competitive, but rarely sterile. Far from it.
There’s a clear trend worth respecting here: both teams have scored in six of the last seven head-to-heads. That’s a strong marker, and it fits the wider picture from both teams’ current form. Karviná haven’t kept many clean sheets, Sigma haven’t either, and when these two get together the chances usually come at both ends. You’d expect more of the same.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/7 for this one. It’s short enough for a reason. Karviná have turned into a team that almost always trades chances, and their home record tells you they’re far more likely to get dragged into a game than control it. Sigma are the same sort of beast on the road — capable of scoring, but not reliable enough to protect a lead or silence a home crowd for 90 minutes. That combination is exactly what BTTS wants.
The xG projection leans into it as well, with Karviná at 1.4 and Sigma at 1.5. A 1-2 away win feels the neatest scoreline, but there’s no need to overcomplicate this. Both sides have recent evidence of creating enough to score, and both have spent too much of the spring leaking goals to trust a clean sheet. If you want a slightly bolder angle, over 2.5 goals has plenty of support too. Still, BTTS is the cleanest play.