AE Kifisia welcome Asteras Aktor to the Stoiximan Super League Relegation Round on Saturday afternoon, 18 April 2026, in a game that carries real weight for both sides. Kifisia sit 10th on 27 points and should feel a little safer, but they’re not out of the woods yet. Asteras are 14th with 17 points and need results fast if they’re going to drag themselves clear of danger.
This is the sort of fixture that can easily turn nervy. AE Kifisia have home advantage, but their season at their own ground has been patchy enough to leave the door open. Asteras, for their part, have been miserable on the road all year, yet they’ve just enough recent stubbornness to make them awkward opponents. There’s also a familiar feel to this meeting. These two have been hard to separate, and that matters when you’re trying to work out where the value sits.
AE Kifisia Form & Analysis
Sebastián Leto’s side come into this one in a strange sort of place. They’ve only won once in their last six, and that victory — a 2-0 home success against NPS Volos on 15 March — now feels like a longer time ago than it should. Since then, Kifisia have lost at Panetolikos, gone down 1-4 at home to PAOK, and then lost again when Panserraikos visited on 4 April. That last defeat hurt. They led against Panserraikos? No. They didn’t. They were second best for long spells and lost 2-1 at home, which is exactly the kind of result that keeps the pressure hanging around.
The one small lift came in the 0-0 draw at Atromitos on 8 April. It wasn’t pretty, and it wasn’t convincing either, but it at least stopped the rot. Kifisia were restricted to very little in attack that day — just 0.28 xG from six shots — yet they did keep things respectable defensively until Yasser Larouci was sent off late on. That red card matters here too, because it tells you this side can still lose their discipline when the game gets messy. They’ve also gone three matches without a win. Not disastrous, but not the kind of rhythm you want heading into a relegation-round game.
At home, Kifisia have been decent without being dominant: four wins, four draws and five defeats, with 17 goals scored and 18 conceded. That’s a middle-of-the-road record, and it fits the eye test. They can score at home, but they rarely put opponents away. Their numbers at their own ground are close enough to average, with 17 goals scored in 13 home league matches, but the defensive side isn’t clean enough to trust blindly. You get the feeling they’re often in games, but rarely in full control. That makes them tricky to back as favourites, especially against a side they’ve found hard to shake off in the past.
Asteras Aktor Form & Analysis
Asteras Aktor arrive with their own issues, but they’ve shown a touch more fight in the last fortnight. Georgios Antonopoulos’ team drew 0-0 at Panserraikos on 8 April, and that came straight after a lively 3-1 home win over AEL Novibet. For one of the few times in this miserable season, they actually looked like a side with some lift in the final third. Before that, though, the picture was grim again: a 2-1 home loss to Panathinaikos, a 1-1 draw at AEL Novibet, and defeats to Panserraikos and PAOK. It’s been stop-start, and more stop than start.
The real problem is their away record. One win, three draws and nine defeats is bleak enough on its own. They’ve scored only six away goals all season and conceded 22. That’s relegation form, plain and simple. You don’t have to dig very deep to see the issue: they struggle to create enough, and when they do, they don’t finish well enough to turn games. Away from home they’re getting squeezed out of matches. Six goals in 13 trips is tiny. You can’t survive long on that sort of output.
Still, there is a hint of resilience in the recent away performances. The 0-0 at Panserraikos came with an xGA of just 0.61, which suggests they weren’t exactly hanging on by their fingertips. Their draw at AEL Novibet earlier in March also showed they can keep a game tight when they have to. That’s the reason they’re not easy to dismiss completely. But let’s be honest: when a team has only one away win all season, you don’t back them with much enthusiasm. Asteras are better at making a game uncomfortable than at winning it. That’s their problem.
Head-to-Head
These two have been tough to separate for a while. The most recent league meeting ended 0-0 at Kifisia in December, and the reverse fixture back in October finished 2-2. Before that, they met in the Greek Cup and drew 1-1, then played out another 1-1 in a friendly. You don’t need a microscope to see the pattern.
There’s a broader theme here too. The head-to-head has been full of goals or deadlocked, and both teams have found a way to stay in the picture. Seven of the last seven meetings have seen Kifisia avoid defeat six times and Asteras avoid defeat four times, which tells you neither side has really had the upper hand for long. The one thing that does stand out? Both teams have scored in six of the last seven. That’s the sort of trend bettors don’t ignore lightly.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 8/11 looks the right call here. Asteras Aktor are hardly in sparkling shape, but Kifisia aren’t strong enough at home to justify short prices, and the away side’s recent results have been just about sturdy enough to protect them against defeat. This is a relegation-round tie between two sides who struggle to turn control into goals. That usually points to a tight, messy afternoon.
The head-to-head also pulls against a straightforward home win. These teams have shared draws, split points, and kept each other honest more often than not, and Kifisia’s own form doesn’t scream authority. A 1-1 scoreline feels fair. Kifisia have enough home output to nick a goal, but Asteras’ recent defensive effort — especially away at Panserraikos — says they won’t be rolled over. If you want a secondary angle, under 2.5 goals is live too, even if the historical BTTS trend keeps it from being the cleaner option.