SV Ried host SK Rapid Wien on Friday evening in the first leg of the Austrian Bundesliga Europa League play-off final, with the return match in Vienna due on 25 May. It is a tie that should be played with real urgency on both sides: Ried want to protect home advantage, while Rapid need to steady themselves after a difficult run and avoid carrying too much baggage into the second leg.
There is already a lot riding on this opening game. Ried came through their semi-final with a stoppage-time 2-1 win over Wolfsberger AC, and they now have the chance to put pressure on a Rapid side that finished the season in fifth and arrive after a heavy away defeat at Sturm Graz. With both clubs still having everything to play for, the first leg feels important without turning into a game either team can afford to treat lightly.
SV Ried Form & Analysis
Ried’s recent results are mixed, but there is enough in their home performances to suggest they can make this competitive. In their last six matches they have three wins and three defeats, and the timing of the most recent victory matters as much as the result itself. Their 2-1 comeback against Wolfsberger AC on Tuesday was a properly encouraging sign: they generated 1.40 xG, allowed only 0.25, and finished the match with an 18-7 shot advantage. They also kept pushing right to the end, with Kingstone Mutandwa scoring in the 80th and 90+3rd minutes after Marco Sulzner had equalised.
That is the kind of energy Ried will need again here. They have also shown they can win tight games at home, beating Grazer AK 2-1 and FC Blau Weiss Linz 2-0 in the Relegation Round. The only downside is that their away form has been less convincing, but this is not the kind of fixture where that matters much. At home, with a two-leg tie in front of them, they should be direct and disciplined rather than cautious.
There are only two confirmed absences, Felix Wimmer and Dominik Stöger, which gives Maximilian Senft a fairly settled hand. The bigger point is mindset: Ried’s coach has already framed the pressure as something to embrace, and that fits a team that looks comfortable when it can play on the front foot. Their home xG numbers this season are also decent enough, and that supports the idea that they should get chances here.
SK Rapid Wien Form & Analysis
Rapid come into this match with more questions around them. Their last six games bring just one win, one draw and four defeats, and the latest one was a poor 2-0 loss at Sturm Graz. That result was not just a defeat on the scoreboard; it was a rough performance too, with Rapid producing only 0.19 xG from four shots while Sturm dominated the game with 23 attempts. Yusuf Demir’s first-half red card only added to the sense of disorder.
That is the main concern for Johannes Thorup’s side. They are not short of motivation, but they are carrying some disruption into the tie. Demir is suspended, several players remain unavailable, and Rapid will need to balance the need for a result with the need to avoid more suspensions before the second leg. After a season that ended with them forced into this play-off, there is little room for another flat display.
Still, Rapid are capable of making this awkward. They beat Red Bull Salzburg 1-0 in late April and have the individual quality to threaten even when the form is poor. The issue is consistency, especially away from home in recent weeks. They have now gone three matches without a win, and the margin for error is smaller in a two-leg tie where the away leg follows so quickly.
Head-to-Head
Ried will take some confidence from recent meetings with Rapid. They won 2-1 in Vienna in December and also beat Rapid 3-0 in the ÖFB Cup in January, so this is not a pairing that has belonged to the visitors lately. One useful wider angle is that Rapid have been first to concede in seven of their last nine matches, which fits the recent pattern of them starting slowly or falling behind in games.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
The main pick is Both Teams To Score at 8/11. That price reflects the feeling that both sides should have moments here: Ried have enough home form and recent momentum to score, while Rapid still have the attacking quality to find a reply even in a difficult spell. The xG projection is close too, at 1.1 for Ried and 1.0 for Rapid.
A 1-1 draw looks the most likely scoreline. It would suit the shape of the tie, leave everything open for the second leg in Vienna, and match the way both teams have been trending: Ried steady enough at home, Rapid vulnerable but still dangerous enough to get on the board.