Aris Thessaloniki welcome NPS Volos to the Kleanthis Vikelidis on Saturday evening in the Stoiximan Super League qualifying round, with both sides chasing a strong finish to the campaign rather than a title tilt. Aris sit 8th on 30 points and Volos are just ahead in 7th with 31, so there’s barely anything between them. One point. That’s the gap.
For Aris, this is about dragging themselves out of a rut and making home advantage count before the season slips away from them. Volos arrive with a slightly better league position, but their away record is a real concern and their defensive numbers leave plenty of room for error. In a mini-table this tight, one clean win can change the mood quickly. A draw wouldn’t do much for either camp.
There’s also the recent meeting to factor in. These two drew 1-1 in Volos on 14 February, and that result fits the wider pattern of fairly tight, stubborn games between them. Aris have not won in their last seven matches, while Volos have at least just beaten PAOK and shown they can still land a punch. Still, this feels like a home-side spot. Aris need it more, and their home record gives them a better base to work from.
Aris Thessaloniki Form & Analysis
Aris have been stuck in a frustrating groove for weeks. Their most recent outing, a 2-0 home defeat to OFI Crete on 22 March, summed up the current mood far too well: plenty of attacking output, no reward, and a feeling that things are going wrong at both ends. They mustered 35 shots and 10 on target in that game, with 2.10 expected goals, yet still lost by two clear goals. That’s the sort of result that makes managers lose sleep.
Before that, they’d taken a point away at Panserraikos in a goalless draw, and before that another 0-0 at home to Atromitos. Go a little further back and you find a 3-1 defeat at Panathinaikos, a 1-1 draw at home to Kifisia, and the 1-1 draw away at Volos. It’s a run full of half-steps and near-misses. They’ve gone seven games without a win, and the last time they tasted victory was the 1-0 away success at Panetolikos on 31 January. That’s a long time ago now.
At home, Aris have been solid rather than convincing. Their league record at the Vikelidis reads two wins, nine draws and two defeats, with 10 goals scored and 11 conceded. That’s the profile of a side that rarely gets blown away, but also struggles to put teams to bed. You can see the issue straight away. They don’t concede much at home, yet they don’t score enough either. The safe bet is usually a cagey one.
The positive for Michalis Grigoriou is that the underlying attacking volume hasn’t dried up completely. Against OFI, Aris created enough to win comfortably on another day. Against Kifisia and Atromitos, they controlled long spells but lacked the final touch. That’s been the story of their season in a nutshell. They’re not broken, but they are blunt. If they’re to get back on track here, they need one of those home games where the first goal finally arrives and the whole thing loosens up.
NPS Volos Form & Analysis
Volos come into this with a sharper recent headline, because their last match was a proper statement. They beat PAOK 2-1 at home on 22 March, and it wasn’t a smash-and-grab either. With 2.61 expected goals, four big chances and a 90+5th-minute winner from Jan Hurtado, they showed real nerve. That sort of result should lift a dressing room. It also tells you they still carry threat when they get things right.
Still, their broader run has been mixed and messy. Before that PAOK win, they lost 2-0 away at Kifisia, drew 1-1 with OFI at home, then shared a 2-2 draw with AEK Athens, lost 2-1 away at Panserraikos and drew 1-1 with Aris in that February meeting. It’s been difficult to get a clean read on them. They can compete with the bigger sides, but the defensive lapses keep showing up. One good result hasn’t wiped that away.
The away numbers are the real problem. Volos have picked up just four wins on the road and have lost nine away matches, with no draws at all. They’ve scored 12 and conceded 21 away from home, which is hardly the profile of a side that travels well. Can they keep it tight here? History says no. They’ve gone through their away fixtures with a lot of pressure on the back line, and that usually ends badly when they’re asked to defend for long spells.
Konstantinos Bratsos has at least seen flashes of attacking competence. Volos have scored 26 league goals overall, which is more than Aris, and they’ve found ways to score in some awkward games. But the trade-off is ugly. They’ve conceded 38, and that sort of number tends to drag a side into trouble over a full season. They’re not a team you trust to protect a lead for very long, and away from home they often end up chasing the game. That won’t be ideal against an Aris side desperate to stop the slide.
Head-to-Head
These two have developed a pattern of tight, awkward meetings. The last clash on 14 February finished 1-1 in Volos, and the one before that at Aris ended 2-0 to the hosts in August 2025. Go back a little further and you see the same general shape: 1-1, 0-1, 2-0, 0-2, 4-2, 0-3. There’s history here, but it’s not a rivalry built on open, end-to-end chaos every week. Most of the time, one side gets on top and the other struggles to respond.
The strongest trend from the series is simple enough: Aris rarely lose this fixture. They’ve gone three straight meetings without defeat, and Volos have failed to keep a clean sheet in those same games. There’s usually a first-goal advantage for Aris too, and that matters here because both teams have been far more comfortable when they can play from ahead. If this one follows the usual script, the home side should land the first meaningful blow.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Aris Thessaloniki to win at 4/6 here. It’s not a flashy price, but it’s the right side of the line. Aris are the more reliable team at home, Volos are poor travellers, and the gap in defensive security is enough to tilt this in the hosts’ favour. The 1.7 to 0.8 xG projection also leans that way. This isn’t a call for Aris to run riot. It’s a call for them to finally convert control into three points.
A 2-1 home win looks the best scoreline. Aris should create enough to edge it, though Volos have shown enough attacking bite to nick something if the game gets stretched. Still, their away record is too fragile to trust, and Aris won’t get a better chance to end the winless run. If you want a slightly safer route, Aris to win or draw is hard to argue with, but the home win is the value play.