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NPS Volos host Aris Thessaloniki on Wednesday evening, 13 May 2026, in the Stoiximan Super League qualifying round, with both sides still trying to squeeze value out of the end of the campaign. There’s more riding on this than a routine league fixture. Volos are sitting seventh with 31 points and still need to protect their position, while Aris are one point behind in eighth and can overtake them with the right result. That’s the sort of margin that keeps things tense right to the final whistle.
These two know each other well by now, too. Aris edged the most recent meeting 3-2 on 18 April, and that result has fed a little bit of edge into this rematch. Volos will remember they were right in that game and still came away empty-handed. Aris, meanwhile, have a chance to turn a narrow gap in the table into a real advantage. There’s no trophy on the line here, but the pressure is obvious. For both clubs, finishing the qualifying round with momentum matters.
The contrast in season-long output is pretty clear. Volos have scored 26 and conceded 38, while Aris have been tighter at the back, shipping just 27 goals despite scoring only 20. That tells you a lot about the shape of this fixture. Volos are the more open side, Aris the more controlled one. And on a night like this, control tends to travel better.
Volos arrive here on the back of a bruising week. Their last home game was a 3-0 loss to APO Levadiakos on 10 May, and it wasn’t just the scoreline that hurt. They were outplayed, managed only 0.53 xG, and allowed 2.17 at the other end. Four big chances against, no big chances created of their own, and only two shots on target from nine attempts. That’s not the profile of a team full of confidence.
Before that, they were beaten 5-2 away to APO Levadiakos on 3 May, a game that turned into a shootout they never really controlled. Go back a little further and there was another loss, this time 3-2 away to Aris on 18 April, which is still fresh in the memory because Volos scored twice and still couldn’t hold on. The one real bright point in this run came against PAOK on 22 March, when they won 2-1 at home. Since then, though, it’s been a slide. They’ve gone three matches without a win and conceded in each of their last six. That’s a problem.
At home, Volos have been steadier than their overall record suggests, but only just. Their home split reads five wins, four draws and four defeats, with 14 goals scored and 17 conceded. That’s not terrible, but it’s hardly intimidating either. They can compete at their own ground, and they’ve shown that by picking up points against decent opposition, yet the defensive return is too loose for a side trying to finish strongly. Sixteen straight matches without a clean sheet is a glaring red flag. You don’t need a microscope to spot that.
Still, Volos aren’t a team that folds completely. They tend to score at home, and they’ve been involved in plenty of open games. Four of their last five have gone over 2.5 goals, and that fits the broader picture of a side who can get on the scoreboard but rarely keep things tidy. Konstantinos Bratsos has a live, front-foot team on his hands. The flip side? They leave gaps everywhere. Aris know it. So do their opponents.
Aris come into the match with a much healthier feel around them. Their last outing was a 3-1 home win over OFI Crete on 10 May, and it was a proper attacking display. They posted 1.76 xG, created two big chances, and had Christian Kouamé in excellent form as the central figure in the performance. Before that, they beat OFI again, this time 2-0 away on 3 May, a controlled result that showed a more disciplined side away from home. Two wins over OFI in a week will do wonders for the mood.
That recent run also includes the 3-2 win over Volos on 18 April, which gives Michalis Grigoriou’s side a psychological edge heading into this one. Earlier in the spring, they were held to goalless draws by Atromitos and Panserraikos and lost 2-0 at home to OFI on 22 March, so it hasn’t been flawless. But there’s a steady thread through the last few weeks: Aris have become harder to beat, and they’ve kept themselves in games long enough for their quality to tell. They’re unbeaten in three now. That matters.
Away from home, Aris have been functional rather than explosive. Their record reads four wins, three draws and six defeats, with 10 goals scored and 16 conceded. So no, they’re not some ruthless road machine. Yet the away numbers still compare quite well with Volos’ defensive record, especially when you factor in how much more compact Aris tend to look. They don’t need a huge volume of chances to hurt sides, and that’s the key point here. If this turns into a game with passages of chaos, Aris are the better side at riding the waves.
The overall table is telling. Aris have only scored 20 league goals all season, which sounds low, but they’ve also limited opponents to 27. That’s the sort of balance that keeps them competitive even when their attack isn’t flying. On the road, they’ve won four times and that’s more away victories than Volos have managed to protect at home in terms of losses. Mind you, Aris aren’t immune to slow starts or scoreless spells. But if the game opens up, they’ve got more reliable end product than the hosts.
Aris have had the better of this matchup for a while now. They’ve gone four meetings without a loss against Volos, and the most recent one finished 3-2 in Aris’ favour on 18 April. That game followed a familiar pattern: Volos competed, got on the scoresheet, and still couldn’t stop Aris from finding the decisive moments. It’s not a coincidence. Aris have been the more efficient side in this fixture.
The broader H2H trend leans towards Aris avoiding defeat and Volos struggling to keep things tight. Volos have not managed a clean sheet in four straight meetings, which fits their wider defensive issues. One other thing stands out here too: these games have often been scrappy and physical. That’s not a surprise when two mid-table sides meet with little room for error. Aris have usually handled that better.
We’re backing Aris Thessaloniki to win at 1/1 here. Our football tips hub is a useful companion here because it pulls together our main football tips hub with singles, goals picks and combo angles in one place. That price is fair for a side with the better recent form, the stronger defensive numbers, and the clearer edge in the head-to-head. Volos can score, and at home they’re never a pushover, but their back line has been leaking for too long. When you’ve gone 16 matches without a clean sheet, you’re asking for trouble against a team that’s already beaten you once this month.
The 1-2 correct score appeals as well. Aris don’t need to blow Volos away. They just need to land a couple of decent moments and stay organised. That’s been the story of plenty of their best away performances this season. Volos may get on the board — they usually do in this sort of fixture — but Aris look the likelier side to manage the game and nick it late if needed.
If you want a slightly safer route, Aris on the draw no bet angle would make sense. But the outright away win is the stronger call. Volos’ defensive fragility is hard to ignore, and Aris have already shown they can punish it.
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