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Slavia Sofia welcome FK Dobrudzha Dobrich to Sofia on Wednesday afternoon in the First Professional League relegation round, with both sides still fighting to keep their season alive and respectable. For Slavia, this is about pulling clear of the churn at the bottom and building some breathing room. For Dobrudzha, the picture is harsher. They’re deep in a rut, short on results and short on confidence, and every dropped point drags them closer to real trouble.
There’s a bit of history here too, and not all of it is encouraging for the visitors. Slavia beat Dobrudzha 3-1 in Sofia back in November, but Dobrudzha did edge a 2-1 home win in July. Those meetings suggest a competitive edge rather than a mismatch, yet the mood around the two camps couldn’t be more different right now. Ratko Dostanić’s side come in with a touch more life about them. Yasen Petrov’s team arrive carrying the weight of a nine-match winless run. That’s a heavy burden. It really is.
Slavia don’t look like a side floating through the final weeks of the campaign in comfort, but they’ve shown enough to suggest they can handle this sort of game. Their last six matches have been a mixed bag: a narrow 2-1 defeat away to Spartak Varna on 10 May, a 2-1 home win over Septemvri Sofia four days earlier, then a flat 3-0 loss at Beroe Stara Zagora. Before that came a 1-1 draw with Botev Vratsa at home, a goalless away draw at Montana, and a 2-1 home defeat to Septemvri in early April. So the pattern is there: they’re not striding through opponents, but they’re usually involved. They score, they concede, and they tend to keep games alive.
That home pattern matters here. Slavia have already beaten Septemvri at their own ground in this run, and even in the draw with Botev Vratsa they kept the contest tight until the end. Their recent numbers point to a side that can be awkward enough at home and dangerous when the game opens up. They’ve also been part of a run where both teams have scored in five of their last seven, and that feels like the most honest lens through which to read them. They don’t shut many doors. Four straight matches without a clean sheet is the warning sign. Yet they’ve got enough thrust to make Dobrudzha work hard.
The bigger picture is simple: Slavia are not watertight, but they’re far more reliable than their opponents. A home side that can score in spurts and at least compete in most matches is a dangerous proposition against a team in Dobrudzha’s state. Ratko Dostanić won’t want chaos, but he’ll know his team should fancy controlling stretches of this contest. The question is whether they can turn that into a clean win. I’m not convinced. A decent result, yes. A serene one? Probably not.
Dobrudzha’s recent run is grim reading, and there’s no way around that. Their last six have brought one draw and five defeats: a 1-0 loss at Montana, a 0-3 home collapse against Lokomotiv Sofia, a 1-1 draw away to Spartak Varna, then another home defeat, 0-1 to Beroe, before the earlier losses to Botev Plovdiv and Spartak Varna in April. The sequence tells its own story. They’re not just losing. They’re struggling to build any momentum inside matches, and once they fall behind the comeback never really arrives.
Away from home, the picture isn’t much kinder. They did earn that 1-1 draw at Spartak Varna on 6 May, which at least stopped the bleeding for a night, but the broader road form remains thin. Their away trips have too often ended with them chasing the game, and that’s reflected in the wider streak data too: Dobrudzha have gone nine matches without a win and have failed to keep a clean sheet in any of those. They’re also conceding first far too often. Six straight games of being the first team to concede is a brutal habit, because it forces them into a type of match they don’t seem equipped to win.
You can see the issue in the flow of their performances. Against Beroe last time out, they stayed in it until the 75th minute before Yesid Valbuena settled matters. Against Spartak Varna, they managed a share of the points, but that felt more like a reprieve than a platform. The problem is not just results. It’s the lack of control. Dobrudzha don’t look settled enough to dictate tempo, and when they’re forced to chase, the structure falls apart. That’s a bad place to be when you’re travelling to face a home side that’ll take encouragement from every loose spell.
There’s also a sobering trend in the head-to-head that fits the broader picture. Dobrudzha have failed to keep a clean sheet in each of the last three meetings between these clubs. That matters because it hints at a familiar vulnerability. They can be broken down by Slavia. And right now, broken down is exactly what they’re doing too often.
These sides have met twice in competitive football across the recent sample, and the split is neat enough: Dobrudzha won 2-1 at home in July 2025, while Slavia answered with a 3-1 victory in Sofia in November. That tells you this isn’t a fixture defined by caution. There’s usually some space, some goals, and enough swing to keep both benches honest.
The more relevant detail for this match is Slavia’s comfort at home in the matchup. They’ve already put three past Dobrudzha on their own pitch, and the visitors have gone without a clean sheet in all three recorded meetings. That edge doesn’t guarantee anything, but it does sharpen the case for the hosts avoiding defeat and for both sides getting chances.
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 4/6 here, and it feels like the cleanest angle in the market. For more context beyond this pick, see our tonight football predictions page, which pulls together tonight’s football predictions if you want more evening fixtures in the same session. Slavia aren’t flawless, but they’ve got enough about them at home to stay upright against a Dobrudzha side that’s won none of its last nine and keeps coughing up the first goal. That’s the key. Once Dobrudzha are chasing, they rarely recover.
The 1-1 correct score also looks live, which fits the xG projection of 1.4 to 1.1. Slavia should have the better share of the ball and the better moments, but Dobrudzha have shown just enough resistance to make a home win less straightforward than it first appears. A narrow 1-0 or a 2-1 home result wouldn’t shock anyone. Still, 1X is the safer call, and it’s the one we’d trust most in a match where Slavia are more stable, more productive and a good deal less fragile.
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