Saturday evening brings a meeting that matters at both ends of the Czech First League table. 14th-place 1. FC Slovácko host sixth-placed FC Hradec Králové, and the contrast is plain enough: the home side are still trying to pull clear of trouble, while Hradec are chasing the sort of finish that keeps them in the European conversation and away from the scramble below.
For Roman Skuhravý’s Slovácko, this is about stopping the slide before it becomes something uglier. They’re sitting on 23 points, with only five wins all season, and the margin between survival anxiety and a calmer final stretch isn’t exactly comforting. David Horejs’ Hradec, on 40 points, arrive with a far stronger hand. They’re not close to the title picture, but they’re in a solid mid-table-to-push-for-more position, and every point on the road matters if they want to keep the pressure on the sides above them.
There’s also a sharp edge to this fixture that Slovácko won’t love. Hradec have had their number in recent meetings, and that history hangs around a bit. Still, the current numbers point to a game with goals in it rather than a slog. Slovácko have scored at home, Hradec have scored away, and neither defence has looked bulletproof. That’s where the money is here.
1. FC Slovácko Form & Analysis
Slovácko’s recent run reads like a side stuck between promise and frustration. They beat FK Pardubice 2-0 at home on 21 February and then followed it up with a useful 2-0 away win at MFK Karviná on 1 March. For a moment, that looked like the start of a recovery. It wasn’t. A 2-2 draw with Mladá Boleslav at home on 7 March interrupted the momentum, then came the heavy trip to Sparta Praha on 15 March, where they were beaten 5-2, and last weekend’s 2-1 defeat away to Slovan Liberec. That’s three matches without a win now, and the mood has shifted quickly.
The deeper concern is the defensive side. Slovácko have conceded 38 league goals in 27 matches, which is too many for a team already hovering in the lower reaches of the table. At home, they’ve been better than their overall standing suggests — four wins, three draws and six defeats, with 15 scored and 16 conceded — but that isn’t a fortress. It’s a ground where they can compete, not one where opponents fear the trip. They’ve tended to be involved in open games there too. No clean sheet in the last three league outings, and that’s a familiar problem.
The Liberec defeat summed up the issues nicely. Slovácko hardly got a foothold, finishing with just 0.35 xG, five shots and only three on target. They were chasing the game after conceding early, and once Liberec took control, the match drifted away from them. That won’t fill them with confidence, because Hradec don’t need a lot to get on top. Roman Skuhravý will want a much tighter midfield shape on Saturday. If Slovácko leave the game stretched, they’ll be punished. Simple as that.
FC Hradec Králové Form & Analysis
Hradec arrive in much better shape. Their latest two league wins have been clean and controlled: 2-0 at home against Bohemians Praha 1905 on 5 April, then a 1-0 home win over Baník Ostrava on 14 March. Before that, they were beaten 3-0 by Viktoria Plzeň, which is no disgrace on its own, but they responded properly. Even the goalless draw with Baník in the Czech Cup on 4 March felt like a game in which they stayed organised rather than panicked. That’s the key difference with Hradec right now. They look steady.
Their away record is respectable rather than flashy, but it’s enough to cause Slovácko problems. Four wins, three draws and six defeats on the road, with 17 goals scored and 21 conceded, tells you they’re not a punch-packing away side. Then again, they don’t have to be. They’ve won at Liberec, they’ve drawn enough games to avoid collapse, and they’ve shown they can carry a threat without dominating possession. Away from home, they’ve been more functional than free-flowing, and that can work well against a team like Slovácko, who can open up a bit once the game becomes stretched.
What’s been most encouraging is the balance. Hradec have scored 37 league goals and conceded 32, which is a decent return for a side in sixth. Their last match against Bohemians was not a smash-and-grab either. They created enough, stayed in control of the contest, and Ondřej Mihálik did the damage with both goals. That kind of performance travels. Maybe not spectacularly, but it travels. And if Horejs gets another composed away display, Slovácko are going to spend long spells chasing shadows.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been hard on Slovácko for a while. Hradec won the reverse league meeting 4-0 on 8 November 2025, and before that they hammered Slovácko 5-1 in Uherské Hradiště in April 2025. Go back a little further and the pattern still leans heavily one way: a 3-0 Hradec win in September 2024, a 1-0 home victory in April 2024, and a 0-0 draw at Slovácko in November 2023. Slovácko did win 2-1 in Hradec back in November 2022, but that feels like the outlier now.
The recent series is hard to ignore. Hradec have gone five meetings without defeat and have won four of those. More than that, they’ve usually scored first and often comfortably. Slovácko have rarely found a way through. That history won’t decide Saturday’s match on its own, but it does tell you which side has had the upper hand psychologically. Slovácko need to break that pattern. They haven’t done it often enough.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 1/3 here, and it’s hard to argue with the angle. Both sides have been involved in enough open, active games to clear that line without much drama. Slovácko’s home matches have produced 31 goals across 13 league outings, while Hradec’s away games have delivered 38 across 13. That’s not a coincidence. Neither back line has been airtight, and both attacks have enough to land at least once.
The projection has this around 2-1, and that feels right. Slovácko should get chances at home even if they’re not the cleaner side, while Hradec’s away threat is real enough to stop this becoming one-way traffic. If you want a slightly bolder angle, both teams to score also has a proper case, but Over 1.5 Goals is the cleaner play. It doesn’t need much from the game. Just one decent spell.