AC Sparta Praha welcome FK Jablonec to the epet ARENA on Saturday evening in a big Czech First League meeting between second and third. There’s more than just points at stake here. Sparta are trying to keep pressure on the sides above them and protect their position in the title race, while Jablonec arrive with their own ambitions intact and a chance to tighten the gap on one of the division’s heavyweights.
It’s been a draining spell for Brian Priske’s side too, because their league schedule has been broken up by Conference League knockout football. They’ve had to live with the strain of European ties against AZ Alkmaar, and while that run is over, the domestic picture is still strong enough. Jablonec, under Josef Petrik, have been a difficult side to pin down all season. They’re sitting right behind Sparta in the table and they’ve already shown they can travel well. This isn’t a routine home banker. Still, Sparta should feel they’ve got enough to get it done.
AC Sparta Praha Form & Analysis
Sparta come into this one with a useful little reset behind them. Their 1-0 win away at FK Teplice on 12 April was exactly the sort of response a top side needs after a bruising European exit. It wasn’t flashy, but it was controlled, and Lukáš Haraslín’s first-half goal settled it after they’d worked the game into a position of authority. The xG numbers told a tidy story too: 1.13 created, only 0.38 conceded. That’s the sort of away performance that steadies a season.
Before that, though, there was a wobble in the middle of the month. Sparta beat MFK Karviná 2-0 at home on 5 April and smashed 1. FC Slovácko 5-2 on 15 March, but sandwiched between those league wins were the two Conference League defeats to AZ Alkmaar, 2-1 away and then 0-4 at home. That home collapse against AZ will still sting. It was a reminder that, for all their quality domestically, they’ve been far less forgiving when the tempo rises and opponents punish mistakes. The bright side? They’ve still won four of their last six in all competitions and they’ve scored in bursts when they get on top.
At home in the league, Sparta have been excellent. Ten wins, three draws and only one defeat at their own ground is exactly the sort of platform title challengers lean on. They’ve scored 35 home goals and conceded 20, so there’s real punch in the attack but also a hint of vulnerability if the game opens up. That 5-2 against Slovácko summed them up neatly. They can rip teams apart. They can also leave gaps. Mind you, a side with 57 league goals overall doesn’t need many invitations.
The home picture is simple enough: Sparta should have the ball, should spend long spells in Jablonec territory and should create enough chances to win. The question is whether they can avoid the kind of loose defending that’s cost them at times this spring. If they’re switched on, they’ll fancy this. If not, Jablonec will sniff a chance.
FK Jablonec Form & Analysis
Jablonec arrive in good spirits after a proper statement at home to Baník Ostrava on 11 April. A 4-1 win is always going to turn heads, and this one was even more convincing than the scoreline suggests. They produced 3.19 xG, restricted Baník to 0.84 and ended the match with five big chances to one. Dominik Hollý, Ondrej Kricfalusi, Nelson Okeke, Ebrima Singhateh and Sebastian Nebyla all got in on the act at different points. That’s not just one player catching fire. That’s a team with real variety.
Their away form deserves respect too. Before the Baník win, Jablonec had gone to FC Zlín and won 3-0 on 4 April, a result that sits comfortably alongside their broader road record. In league play away from home they’ve taken 25 points from 14 matches, with eight wins, one draw and five defeats. Eighteen goals scored and just 15 conceded on the road is a tidy return. They don’t travel like passengers. They’ve been awkward, efficient and at times ruthless, which is why they’re still firmly in the top-three conversation.
That said, their recent results also show a side that can go flat when the game drifts away from them. They lost 2-0 at Dukla Praha on 14 March and 2-1 at home to SK Sigma Olomouc on 7 March. In between, they drew 2-2 with Slavia Praha in the Czech Cup, which at least showed some nerve against elite opposition. Before the Baník blast, the pattern was a bit uneven: a couple of wins, a couple of defeats, and a sense that Jablonec are dangerous when the game suits them but less convincing when forced to chase control.
Josef Petrik will know his side can’t just stand off Sparta and hope for the best. The away numbers are decent, the recent win at Baník was impressive, and they’ve scored 39 league goals overall. Still, they’re up against a home side with a stronger record, a higher ceiling and the better attacking depth. Jablonec can hurt people. But can they keep Sparta quiet for 90 minutes? That’s the real test.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings lean strongly towards goals and goals from both sides. The last eight league encounters have produced a clear pattern, and the recent one at Jablonec in July 2025 ended 1-1, while Jablonec shocked Sparta 3-1 in Prague in May 2025. Sparta did win the meeting at home in December 2024, though, and they’ve generally had the upper hand across the broader stretch.
What stands out most is how often both teams find a way onto the scoresheet. Five of the last six league meetings have seen both teams score, and that feels relevant again here. Sparta haven’t kept a clean sheet against Jablonec in the last four meetings, while Jablonec’s defensive record in this fixture has been patchy for a long time. That points towards another open game rather than a cagey one.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re taking AC Sparta Praha to win at 8/15. It’s not a giant price, but it’s a fair one. Sparta have the stronger home record, the better overall league numbers and a much more reliable attacking base in Prague. Jablonec’s away form is good enough to make this competitive, yet the gap in squad power and home consistency still points the same way.
A 2-1 home win feels the right call. Sparta should create enough to score twice, and Jablonec have done enough on the road this season to suggest they won’t be blanked without a fight. If you want a different angle, Both Teams to Score also has appeal given the way this fixture usually opens up. Still, the straight home win is the play.