SK Slavia Praha host FK Jablonec on Wednesday evening, 13 May 2026, in the Czech First League Championship round, with the title picture still very much alive. Slavia sit top of the table on 77 points and, with the finish line now close, every home game carries the feel of a statement rather than a routine fixture. Jablonec arrive in fourth on 52 points. They’re chasing a strong finish, but this is the sort of trip that tells you a lot about where they really stand.
The incentive for Slavia is obvious. Keep winning, keep the gap healthy, and don’t let the chasing pack sniff anything. Jablonec, though, have their own angle. They’ve already shown enough this season to sit in the upper half, but this is a big test of whether they can live with the best side in the country when the pressure’s on. It’s also a rematch of the sort that tends to stick in the memory. These two have played out some wild ones, and recent meetings have been anything but dull.
Slavia beat Sparta Praha 3-2 at home on 9 May, and that result told you plenty about their temperament. They were under pressure, they took a couple of hits, and they still found enough going forward to get the job done. Before that came a 2-1 away win at Slovan Liberec, a 2-1 home success against Sigma Olomouc, and a 0-0 draw with Viktoria Plzeň. Go back a little further and there was a 2-1 defeat at Hradec Králové, then a 2-0 away win at Baník Ostrava. That’s a proper top-team run: not flawless, but full of results.
At home, Slavia’s record is the sort of thing title winners lean on. They’ve won 13, drawn 3 and lost just 1 in the league at this ground, scoring 38 and conceding only 13. That’s a brutal home profile. They don’t just win here; they usually control games, and even when they’re not at their cleanest, they tend to find a way to put one or two past the visitors. The recent derby win over Sparta was chaotic — red cards, goals, pressure all over the place — but the key point is simple: Slavia keep producing. They’ve now gone three league matches unbeaten since that loss at Hradec, and that’s exactly what champions do. They absorb a messy spell and keep moving.
There’s a slight edge to their attacking play at home, too. They don’t need a perfect performance to score twice. The numbers suggest a side that creates plenty of danger in the final third, and that’s been visible in recent weeks. The concern? They’re not completely watertight. Even at home, they’ve shown they can be dragged into open games, and Sparta’s two goals last time out were a reminder that Slavia can be exposed if the tempo gets wild. Still, when you’re 23 wins deep in a 33-match league season, complaints sound a bit thin. They’re top for a reason.
SK Slavia Praha Form & Analysis
The recent story for Jindřich Trpišovský’s side has been one of control with a touch of chaos. The 3-2 win over Sparta was the headline act, but it sat alongside a run that included a narrow away win at Liberec and a home victory over Sigma, both by the same 2-1 scoreline. The draw against Plzeň showed they can manage a tougher defensive game when needed. The defeat at Hradec was the one blip, and it didn’t knock them off course for long. That’s a strong response pattern. No drama for the sake of it. Just points.
What stands out is how often Slavia find the important goals in the key moments. They’ve been first to score in a good number of these recent match-ups, and once they’re ahead, they usually look comfortable enough to protect the lead. They’ve also got the kind of home record that puts pressure on visitors before a ball is kicked. If you’re coming here in May, chasing Slavia around for 90 minutes, you need a proper plan. Most teams don’t have one. The rest just hope.
Jablonec arrive in decent overall league position, but the last few weeks have been a little jagged. They drew 1-1 at home to Hradec Králové on 10 May, which was not the worst result on paper, yet it extended a spell in which they’ve struggled to put wins together. Before that came a 2-0 defeat away to Sparta, a 1-2 home loss against Liberec, and a cup win over Mladá Boleslav that at least gave them a lift. Prior to that, they lost 3-1 away to Sparta, then beat Baník Ostrava 4-1 at home. It’s been a stop-start run. One step forward, one step back, then another wobble.
Away from home in the league, Jablonec have an 8-1-7 record, with 19 goals scored and 20 conceded. That’s solid enough to explain their fourth-place standing, but it doesn’t scream travel strength. They can compete on the road, yes, and eight wins away from home is nothing to dismiss. Yet they’ve also dropped seven, and the defeats tend to come when they’re forced to chase the game. That matters here, because Slavia don’t often let visitors settle. The opening half-hour can become a long, uncomfortable stretch for the away side.
Jablonec do have some bite. They’re capable of scoring, and the 4-1 home win over Baník showed what happens when they get space and rhythm. But the flip side is obvious: they’ve been beaten at Sparta twice in this stretch, and they were shut out in one of those trips. Against a side like Slavia, that matters. They’ve now gone three league matches without a win, and if that becomes four on Wednesday evening, nobody will be shocked. They’re good enough to threaten. They’re not good enough to dictate.
FK Jablonec Form & Analysis
The 1-1 draw with Hradec on 10 May was a decent recovery from the 2-0 loss at Sparta, but it didn’t really change the mood. Lubos Kozel’s side have had patches of form this season, no doubt about it, yet their recent league run has been too uneven to inspire real confidence for a trip of this size. They nicked a cup win over Mladá Boleslav, but league football has been harsher. Two defeats to Sparta in close succession, the home loss to Liberec, and a general lack of momentum have left them looking like a side in need of a reset rather than a late-season surge.
On the road, Jablonec’s record is respectable rather than fearsome. Eight wins away from home suggests they’re no pushovers, and they’ve scored 19 goals in those matches, which is a useful return. But they’ve also conceded 20, and that balance tells a story. They’re competitive, not secure. They can travel, but they don’t travel like a side comfortable in hostile territory. When they’re forced to absorb pressure for long periods, cracks appear. That’s the problem at Slavia. You don’t get much time to breathe.
They’ve scored in enough away fixtures to suggest they won’t just roll over, which is why a narrow scoreline feels more realistic than a procession. Still, the trend of the last few weeks points one way. Slavia are more stable, more ruthless, and better at turning home advantage into points. Jablonec can make a game of it if they strike first or keep it level deep into the second half. If they fall behind early, it gets tough. Very tough.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has had a habit of turning into a proper shootout. The most recent meeting came in the Czech Cup on 3 March 2026, when Jablonec edged Slavia 5-4 in a wild game. Before that, Slavia won 4-3 at home in the league on 13 December 2025. There was also a 1-1 draw in August 2025, and Jablonec beat Slavia 3-2 in May of that year. The pattern is clear enough. Goals usually arrive. Defences usually don’t last long.
That makes this game harder to treat like a straightforward top-versus-fourth meeting. Slavia have had the better of the league campaign and the stronger home record, but Jablonec have repeatedly found ways to score against them. Four of Slavia’s last four meetings with Jablonec have seen both sides score, and that’s not a quirk you ignore lightly. Mind you, the league context is different now. Slavia’s control at home this season is much stronger than the occasional chaos of past meetings.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Home Win at 2/5 for this one. Slavia’s home record is the anchor here: 13 wins from 17 league games, just one defeat, and only 13 conceded. That’s the profile of a side you side with at this price, especially against opponents who’ve just gone three league matches without a win. Jablonec have enough quality to make it awkward, but they’ve also shown a tendency to wobble when the pressure rises. Slavia usually don’t need a perfect performance to get the job done. They just need enough control. That’s the difference.
A 2-1 home win feels the right call. Jablonec should get chances — they often do in this fixture, and Slavia aren’t exactly strangers to conceding here — but the hosts’ edge in structure, firepower and home consistency should see them through. If you want a market with a bit more value, both teams to score has a strong case given the recent head-to-head trend. But the straightforward call is still Slavia to win. And win they should.