Slavia Sofia host Botev Vratsa on Sunday afternoon in the First Professional League’s relegation round, and both sides arrive with plenty still on the line. This isn’t just a low-stakes run-out to wind down the season. It’s the part of the campaign where every point can ease nerves, sharpen survival hopes and stop a spring from turning into a slog.
For Slavia, the job is to steady themselves after a mixed spell that has produced flashes of quality without a proper run of form. For Botev Vratsa, there’s a different kind of urgency. They’ve been lively enough to make life awkward for opponents, but they’re still living a bit too dangerously for comfort. A result here would matter. A clean performance would matter too. Neither side can afford drift.
The recent meetings add a little extra spice. Slavia have avoided defeat in three straight competitive clashes with Botev, while the broader pattern between these teams has been open and, at times, chaotic. Goals usually arrive. That’s one reason this feels more like a game that could swing on moments than one settled by control.
Slavia Sofia Form & Analysis
Slavia’s last six matches have followed a stop-start rhythm that’s hard to trust. They began with a goalless draw away to PFK Montana 1921 on 16 April, a game in which they never quite found their edge and finished with just 0.92 xG from seven shots. Before that, they had already let a home lead slip in a 2-1 defeat to FK Septemvri Sofia, a loss that underlined a familiar issue: when Slavia don’t seize control early, they can drift. It’s been a patchy spell, no doubt about it.
Still, there have been bright moments. Their 3-1 away win at Cherno More Varna on 5 April was the best of the bunch, a proper away performance with purpose and conviction. They also beat FK Spartak Varna 4-0 at home in early March, which shows what this side can do when it clicks. The problem is consistency. That one convincing home victory sits beside a 1-0 defeat to Botev Plovdiv and the recent loss to Septemvri. Good enough in bursts. Not enough over a run.
At home, Slavia don’t quite look like a side that should be feared by anyone. The available record doesn’t give the full season split, but the recent home results tell the story well enough: a 4-0 win, then a 0-1 defeat, then the 1-2 loss to Septemvri. That’s not a fortress. It’s a ground where opponents can absolutely get something. The stronger theme, though, is that Slavia generally find a way to compete. They’ve scored in four of their last six overall, and they’ve kept things tight enough to stay in most games. That makes them stubborn. It also makes them vulnerable to the sort of late twist that turns a draw into frustration.
Ratko Dostanić will want more bite in the final third and a cleaner defensive edge when the game opens up. Slavia don’t need to be brilliant here. They just need to be more reliable than they’ve been. At the moment, they’re a side you’d expect to create chances, but not necessarily to kill a match off. That’s the issue.
Botev Vratsa Form & Analysis
Botev Vratsa come into this on the back of a wild 3-2 home win over Lokomotiv Sofia on 14 April, a match that had a bit of everything and ended with a flurry. They led early through Caue Caruzo Alves, were pegged back, then found another gear late on. Daniel Genov scored before half-time, Mitchy Ntelo levelled in the 89th minute, and Yoan Bornosuzov grabbed the winner in stoppage time. It was frantic. It was messy. It was also hugely useful.
That kind of result sums Botev up right now. They’re not boring, and they’re rarely passive. Before beating Lokomotiv Sofia, they lost narrowly away to FC CSKA 1948 Sofia and drew 0-0 at FK Septemvri Sofia. Earlier in the run, they beat Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1-0 at home, lost 2-1 to the same Lokomotiv Sofia side, then won 3-1 away at Botev Plovdiv and 1-0 at home to Arda Kardzhali. There’s enough in there to show a team that can win games, including away from home, but also one that gives opponents far too many openings.
Away from home, Botev’s numbers and recent results point in different directions. They’ve got a 3-1 win at Botev Plovdiv and a 0-0 draw at Septemvri in the mix, which tells you they can travel. Yet the loss at CSKA 1948 Sofia was another reminder that they don’t always manage games well on the road. In their away matches, they’ve tended to look more exposed when the tempo rises and the defending gets stretched. That won’t please Todor Simov. Not at all.
There is some attacking edge to lean on, though. In their win over Lokomotiv Sofia, Botev posted 2.70 xG and fired 16 shots. That’s a strong platform. They’re creating enough to trouble teams, and they’ve now scored in four of their last six. The question is whether they can keep Slavia quiet for long enough to turn that into a win. Away from home, the answer feels less certain. They’ve got the punch to score. The steel to protect it? That’s still up for debate.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has produced plenty of goals and not much caution. Slavia beat Botev Vratsa 1-0 away on 24 November 2025, which is the clearest sign they know how to frustrate this opponent when it matters. But look beyond that and the overall pattern is much more open. The sides drew 2-2 and 3-3 in two of their recent meetings, Slavia won 4-2 at home in April 2025, and Botev claimed a 2-1 win in May of the same year. It’s been back and forth.
The broader trend is even harder to ignore. In five of the last six meetings, both teams have scored, and five of the last six have gone over 2.5 goals. That’s not a coincidence. These matches tend to open up. Neither defence has consistently looked comfortable when the other side starts pushing forward, and that’s exactly why this one has the feel of a game where one goal probably won’t be enough for either team.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
Double Chance 1X at 1/2 looks the right call here. Slavia aren’t flawless, but they’ve generally been hard enough to beat in this matchup, and their recent home performances give them a decent platform to avoid defeat. Botev Vratsa bring more goal threat than many sides in this phase of the season, yet their away record still has enough wobble in it to make an outright away win too ambitious.
The 1-1 scoreline feels the cleanest fit. Slavia have the sort of form that gets them into matches without always finishing the job, while Botev have the energy and directness to nick a goal even if they don’t control proceedings. If you’re looking for a slightly bolder angle, both teams to score has obvious appeal given the recent head-to-head trend. But the safer play is to stay with Slavia or the draw.