AEK Athens welcome PAOK to the OPAP Arena on Sunday evening in the Stoiximan Super League Championship Round, and this one lands with real weight at the top end of the table. AEK lead the way with 60 points, PAOK are just three behind on 57, and with both clubs deep in the title conversation, this isn’t the sort of fixture anyone wants to waste. The margin for error is tiny now. One slip and the pressure spikes.
It’s also a meeting between two sides who know each other too well. AEK have been juggling league duty with a European run, while PAOK have been trying to keep pace after their own busy season. Marko Nikolić’s team arrive off the back of a high-energy 3-1 win over Rayo Vallecano in the Conference League on 16 April, while Razvan Lucescu’s side are coming in after a frustrating 2-1 defeat at NPS Volos in the league on 22 March. That contrast matters. AEK look sharp, PAOK look a little more vulnerable, but the table says this is still a proper heavyweight scrap.
The prize is obvious. AEK want to defend first place and keep control of the championship race. PAOK know a win would drag them right back into it and shift the mood around the whole round. Draw? That probably suits the visitors more than the leaders. This game has the feel of one of those tight, tense derby-style league nights where nobody wants to blink first.
AEK Athens Form & Analysis
AEK’s recent run has been a mixed bag, but the important thing is they’ve kept responding. They hammered AE Kifisia 3-0 at home in the league on 22 March, then stumbled at home to NK Celje in Europe with a 0-2 loss six days later. A 2-2 draw away to Atromitos followed, and that could’ve rattled them, only for them to explode in the second leg against Celje on 12 March with a 4-0 away win. The tie with Rayo Vallecano then brought the usual pendulum swing: a 3-0 loss in Spain on 9 April, then a 3-1 home win on 16 April to turn the night around. That’s the story here. AEK take a punch, then they throw one back.
At home, they’ve been excellent all season. Eleven wins, one draw and just one defeat in league matches on their own ground, with 25 goals scored and only five conceded. That’s a ridiculous base to work from. Five goals let in at home across the league campaign is the sort of record that gives you a platform in any title race, and it also explains why they keep finding ways to stay on top even when performances aren’t perfect. They don’t have to be dazzling every week. They just don’t have to be beaten.
There are signs of real attacking punch too. AEK have scored three or more in several of their recent home outings, and that Conference League win over Rayo was a good reminder of what they can do when they get on the front foot. The flip side? They’ve shown they can be opened up, especially when the game stretches. Rayo created chances in Athens, Celje got joy against them too, and PAOK will fancy their moments if AEK push too hard. Still, with this home record, you’d expect Nikolić’s side to start on the front foot and try to pin Lucescu’s team back early.
PAOK Form & Analysis
PAOK’s recent league form has been a little uneven, but there’s still a strong side in there. They lost 2-1 away at NPS Volos on 22 March, which was a poor way to finish their most recent outing, especially after conceding late. Before that, they handled APO Levadiakos 3-0 at home, drew 0-0 away to Olympiacos, and had that eye-catching 4-1 win at AE Kifisia. Put it together and you get a team that can bully weaker opponents, keep things tight against the bigger boys, and then occasionally leave the door open when they’re expected to manage a result. That’s PAOK in a nutshell right now.
Their away league record is solid rather than spectacular: six wins, four draws and three defeats, with 25 scored and 14 conceded. So they’re not strangers to getting a result on the road. Far from it. But this isn’t a clean, suffocating away profile. Fourteen conceded away from home is a decent chunk, and when you pair that with a recent loss at Volos and a blank against Olympiacos, the picture becomes clear. PAOK can travel, but they don’t always travel cleanly.
What stands out most is that they usually stay in games. Even when they’re not at their best, they’re rarely blown away. The 0-0 at Olympiacos showed that. The 1-2 loss at Volos was tight for long spells too, even if the underlying numbers there weren’t flattering. That’s why they’re dangerous in a fixture like this. They don’t need to dominate to nick something. Give them a half-chance, and they’ll take it. But if AEK can keep the game at their preferred tempo, Lucescu’s side could end up chasing it rather than shaping it.
The concern for PAOK is simple: they’re up against a home side that has been miserly in league games and is usually very hard to shake at the OPAP Arena. They’ve got quality, yes. They’ve got enough attacking threat to test AEK, certainly. But this feels like the sort of night where one lapse can cost them more than they’d like.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been hard to separate for a while, and the recent meetings back that up. PAOK beat AEK 2-0 in Athens on 19 October 2025, but the return league meeting on 15 February 2026 finished 0-0 in Thessaloniki. Go back a bit further and it keeps wobbling back and forth: PAOK won 1-0 at home in May 2025, then edged a wild 3-2 game in Athens in March. AEK had their own wins too, including a 2-1 away victory in February 2025 and a 1-0 home win in the Greek Cup in December 2024.
There isn’t much daylight between them across the rivalry, and that’s the key point. Three of the last four league meetings finished with under 2.5 goals, and PAOK have had the better of AEK far too often for the hosts to feel completely comfortable. This one usually ends up tight. Usually edgy. Rarely dull.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 8/15 looks the strongest play here. PAOK don’t need to win for this to land, and that matters because a draw already feels very live in a meeting like this. AEK’s home record is excellent, no question, but PAOK have the tools to frustrate them, and the recent head-to-head pattern leans away from the leaders being able to just steamroll this one.
The 1-1 correct score fits the shape of the game. AEK should get chances at home and PAOK have enough about them to land a goal of their own, but this doesn’t scream open contest. It feels like one of those nights where both sides spend long stretches trying to avoid the decisive mistake. If you want a small alternative, under 2.5 goals has a strong case too, given how often these meetings stay tight.