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Arda Kardzhali welcome Ludogorets on Wednesday evening in the Parva Liga, and the pressure sits far more heavily on the visitors. Arda start the round seventh on 41 points after 29 matches, a respectable return but one that leaves little margin if they want to push higher and finish the campaign with real purpose. Ludogorets are second on 60 points, chasing the top end of the table and still firmly locked into the kind of run-in where every dropped point stings.
That’s the difference here. Arda are playing for position, momentum and a statement result against one of the division’s heavyweights. Ludogorets are playing for something bigger. Their record of 17 wins, nine draws and only three defeats tells its own story, and with 57 goals scored and just 19 conceded, they’ve looked like one of the league’s most complete sides for most of the season.
There is a wrinkle, though. Arda have already shown this season that Ludogorets can be hurt. Their 3-2 win away to Ludogorets in November is still one of the standout surprise results in this fixture, and it gives the home side a psychological foothold. Even so, this match arrives with the broader picture tilted clearly toward the visitors. The table says that. So do the recent results.
Alexander Tunchev’s side have been a bit of a mixed bag lately, though not in a chaotic way. More in a “good enough against most teams, but vulnerable when the level rises” way. They lost 1-0 away at Levski Sofia last time out, and the manner of it mattered. Arda offered very little going forward, finished with no shots on target, and had to play most of the contest with 10 men after Lachezar Kotev’s red card in the 36th minute. They were still only one goal down at the end, which says something for their organisation, but it wasn’t a performance to frighten Ludogorets.
Before that, things had looked much healthier. They beat PFK Montana 1921 2-1 at home on 4 April, then went away to FK Septemvri Sofia and won 4-1 in one of their sharpest attacking displays of the spring. A 2-0 home victory over FK Dobrudzha Dobrich had come just before that, giving them three straight league wins and a clear sense that they were building something. Go back one game further and the flip side appears again: a 1-0 loss at Botev Vratsa. That sequence captures Arda quite well. They can put together convincing wins, especially against the league’s lesser sides, but their margin for error is thin.
At home, the record is decent rather than dominant. Six wins, four draws and four defeats from 14 league matches, with 14 goals scored and 12 conceded. Those numbers tell you this isn’t a side blowing teams away on its own ground. They tend to play tighter games, and their scoring return of exactly one goal per home match is modest. That won’t scare Ludogorets.
The concern for Arda is at the back. They’ve gone three straight matches without a clean sheet, and even in the wins there have been moments when the defensive structure looked a touch fragile. Their overall goals-against tally of 27 in 29 league games is far from poor, but the recent trend matters more here. Against Levski they barely threatened. Against stronger opposition, that can become a problem fast. If Arda fall behind, you do wonder where the response comes from.
Ludogorets arrive in much better shape, even if the latest result was slightly frustrating. They were held 0-0 at home by Cherno More Varna on 9 April, but the draw was far kinder to the visitors than to Per Mathias Hogmo’s team. Ludogorets posted 1.43 xG to just 0.01 against, had a 12-2 shot edge, and didn’t allow a single shot on target. On another night, they win that game comfortably. It was a wasteful evening, not a warning sign.
The five matches before that were all wins, and some of them were emphatic. They beat FC CSKA 1948 Sofia 3-0 at home, crushed FK Spartak Varna 5-1 away, and also won 3-0 against CSKA Sofia. There was a 3-0 away victory at PFK Montana 1921 in there as well, plus a 1-0 home success over Levski Sofia. That is strong form by any standard. Seven games unbeaten in all competitions since the Europa League defeat away to Ferencváros in late February, five wins in their last six league outings, and a goal difference over that six-match spell of 15 scored and only one conceded. That’s title-chasing form. Plain and simple.
Their away record is one of the biggest reasons to fancy them here. Ludogorets have taken 28 points from 14 league trips, winning eight, drawing four and losing only two. They’ve scored 29 goals away from home and conceded just 10. Those are elite numbers in this division. Nearly 2.1 goals scored per away game, barely 0.7 conceded. You don’t need much more convincing than that.
What stands out most is the balance. They’re not just winning; they’re controlling matches. They’ve been first to score in six of their last seven, and when they do get in front they tend to suffocate games. The 0-0 with Cherno More may have interrupted the winning run, but it actually reinforced how hard they are to play against. Cherno More produced virtually nothing. If Ludogorets bring that same territorial control here, Arda could spend long stretches pinned back.
This fixture has been more awkward for Ludogorets than you might expect. Arda are unbeaten in the last three meetings, drawing 1-1 and 2-2 in two of the previous three before landing that eye-catching 3-2 win away from home in November. So there is a recent pattern of Arda asking uncomfortable questions.
Still, the wider head-to-head is much less forgiving for the hosts. Ludogorets won 4-0 in Kardzhali in December 2024, beat Arda 5-1 and 2-0 in earlier meetings, and have regularly found goals in this matchup. If you want one angle from the recent history, it’s this: these games haven’t always been straightforward for the favourites, but Ludogorets usually create enough to put Arda under sustained pressure.
Away Win at 1.46 looks the right call. Ludogorets are simply the stronger side, and the gap shows up everywhere that matters: second against seventh in the table, 57 goals scored against 32, and a superb away record of eight wins in 14 with only 10 conceded. Arda’s home numbers are solid without being special, and their last outing at Levski exposed a familiar issue — limited attacking punch when the opposition can control the game.
There is always a small warning light when the underdog has taken points in recent head-to-head meetings, and Arda have done exactly that. Still, Ludogorets are on an eight-match unbeaten run and had won five on the bounce before that scoreless draw with Cherno More. The xG projection also leans their way, with Arda at 0.79 and Ludogorets at 1.22. We’re expecting the visitors to grind this out with authority rather than chaos. The predicted score is 0-2.
If you wanted a side angle, under 3.5 goals has some appeal alongside the away win. Arda don’t score heavily at home, and Ludogorets often win these away games through control rather than wild shootouts.