TSV Hartberg welcome LASK to the Championship Round on Sunday afternoon with both sides still chasing something meaningful late in the Austrian Bundesliga season. Hartberg sit fifth on 22 points, a solid enough campaign in the context of their size and budget, but they’re not just turning up to make up the numbers. Every point matters now, because the gap in this group is tight and the margins between finishing well, slipping back, or grabbing a slice of European relevance are razor thin.
LASK are better placed in third on 27 points, and they’ll arrive with a clearer sense of purpose. Dietmar Kuhbauer’s side are still pushing for the strongest possible finish in the top six, while Hartberg, under Manfred Schmid, are trying to prove they can hang with the bigger names again after a mixed run through the Championship Round. The first meeting in March ended 0-0 in Linz, which says a lot about the balance of this fixture. It’s rarely straightforward. It’s usually tense. And if you’re looking for a game with open space and easy goals, this probably isn’t it.
Still, both teams have found enough in attack to make a scoring angle appealing. LASK have scored in six straight league games against Hartberg, and their own recent matches have had goals at both ends all over them. Hartberg, for their part, have just gone to SK Rapid Wien and won 2-0, which is no small feat in this section of the season. That result freshened up their mood nicely. This one has all the ingredients for a competitive, slightly scrappy contest — and one that should keep the scoreboard busy enough.
TSV Hartberg Form & Analysis
Hartberg’s recent league story is a bit of a rollercoaster, but there’s a resilience to it that shouldn’t be dismissed. They went to Rapid on 22 April and came away with a polished 2-0 win, a result built on patience rather than firepower. Before that, they’d drawn 2-2 at home with the same opponents, held away at Sturm Graz, and earlier ran into a 1-2 home defeat to Red Bull Salzburg. Go back a little further and you find a narrow 0-1 home loss to Austria Wien, plus that 0-0 away draw with LASK in March. Three unbeaten now, after ending a poor spell. That’s a decent response.
The deeper home numbers paint a side that’s been hard to break but not especially productive at their own ground. Hartberg’s league home record stands at four wins, five draws and five defeats, with 16 goals scored and 16 conceded. Even on paper that feels fair. They’re not a team that regularly blows opponents away in front of their own fans, but they’ve also avoided becoming a soft touch. The clean sheet at Rapid was their second straight scoreless concession in league play after the draw at Sturm, and that’s one reason this game may stay tighter than LASK would like.
What’s tricky with Hartberg is that their home ceiling isn’t very high. They’ve only scored twice in a couple of recent home outings against Rapid and Salzburg, and even in matches where they’ve competed well, the margin has been slim. Their strength is keeping games alive. Their weakness is turning that into control. You can see why they’ve landed in mid-table rather than pushing much higher. They’re organised. They’re stubborn. But they don’t often force the issue for long enough. Against a LASK side that tends to score and concede in equal measure, Hartberg’s best route is probably to stay compact and wait for moments rather than try to trade punches early.
LASK Form & Analysis
LASK come into this one on the back of a 1-1 draw away at Sturm Graz, and that felt about right given the chaos of the match. They led through Moses Usor, then had to withstand a messy second half that included two red cards for Sturm and a late penalty equaliser. Before that, they’d drawn 1-1 at home to the same opponent, after an eye-catching 3-2 away win at Red Bull Salzburg and a 4-1 home demolition of Austria Wien. That’s a proper mix of grit and firepower. The wobble came at Rapid, where they lost 4-2, and that game remains a reminder that LASK can be pulled into a shootout and still come out second best.
On the road, their numbers are fine rather than dominant. LASK’s away record in the league is five wins, four draws and five defeats, with 20 scored and 22 conceded. That last figure matters. They’re not travelling as some compact, shut-the-door unit. They’ll give you openings. Six of their last six league games have seen them concede, and that’s the sort of streak that keeps BTTS firmly in play. They’ve also been involved in plenty of high-variance matches away from home, which makes them dangerous, but never entirely safe.
The positive for Kuhbauer is obvious enough: LASK still carry real threat. They’ve scored in all of their last six league matches, and they’ve done it against a decent level of opposition. Usor’s form gives them thrust, while the way they came through Salzburg tells you they can punish teams who leave space. The flip side? They rarely look like a clean-sheet side, especially on the road. That’s a problem here, because Hartberg are awkward at home and won’t need much encouragement to nick a goal if LASK switch off. The away side should fancy themselves to score. They just won’t fancy keeping it shut.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has settled into a fairly clear pattern, and it’s one that leans away from a low-risk, cagey script. LASK are unbeaten in nine straight meetings with Hartberg, a run that stretches back across several seasons and includes wins, draws and very few signs of panic. Yet the recent results have been a little less one-sided than that overall sequence might suggest. The sides drew 0-0 in Linz on 13 March, Hartberg held them to 2-2 in December, and the previous meeting before that finished 3-3. That’s not the sort of record that screams control from either side.
There’s one more angle that matters here: these meetings often stay tighter than average, but not always because the attacks are poor. Rather, both sides seem capable of cancelling each other out in phases before something opens up late. Three of the last four league meetings have produced at least one goal for each team, and that feels relevant again. LASK may dominate the overall head-to-head story, but Hartberg have been stubborn enough to keep finding a way onto the scoresheet.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 8/11 is the call here, and it’s the strongest play on the card. The price is fair, maybe even a touch generous, because LASK have scored in six straight league outings and have gone six without a clean sheet. That combination is hard to ignore. Hartberg have enough at home to contribute too, especially after taking points from Rapid and Sturm in their last two matches. This doesn’t look like a game where one side simply locks the door and walks away.
The 1-2 correct score also fits the shape of it. LASK have a bit more punch, and their overall quality in the final third should tell over 90 minutes, but Hartberg are too awkward to blank completely. You’d expect both sides to get chances. You’d also expect LASK to find one more. If you want a small alternative, the over 2.5 goals market is live as well, though BTTS feels the cleaner angle given how often both defences have been giving something away lately.