Monday night in the Parva Liga brings together a side scrapping for survival and another still pushing to finish the regular season strongly. Beroe Stara Zagora host Lokomotiv Plovdiv with the table painting the picture clearly enough: the home side are 15th with 22 points from 29 matches, while the visitors sit fifth on 45. One team is trying to stop the slide. The other is trying to keep momentum and protect a top-half standing that has been built on steadiness rather than flair.
For Beroe, every point feels heavy now. They’ve won only four league matches all season and their margin for error is basically gone. Lokomotiv arrive with a different mood. Dušan Kosič’s side aren’t tearing through the division, but they are awkward to beat and they’ve put together a decent little unbeaten run at the right time. That matters. In this sort of game, league position doesn’t always guarantee comfort, but it does tell you where the pressure sits. Most of it is on Beroe.
There’s also a style contrast here that should shape the evening. Beroe don’t score much and concede far too often. Lokomotiv don’t blow teams away, yet they usually keep matches under control and rarely get dragged into chaos. You can already see why the betting angle leans where it does.
Beroe Stara Zagora Form & Analysis
Beroe’s recent run reads like a team struggling for oxygen. Their last six league matches have brought five defeats and just one win, and even that victory — a 1-0 away success at PFK Montana 1921 on 22 March — felt more like a brief escape than a turning point. Since then they’ve lost 3-0 at home to CSKA Sofia, and that came after another home defeat, 1-0 against Levski Sofia, and a 3-0 loss to Slavia Sofia earlier in the month. Too many blanks. Too many games slipping away without much resistance.
Their most recent outing on Thursday at Lokomotiv Sofia summed them up. Beroe were beaten 2-1 away from home, with David Valverde Juan putting them ahead in the 42nd minute after Juanca Pineda’s assist. Even then, it never felt secure. Lokomotiv Sofia had 24 shots to Beroe’s 11 and landed 10 efforts on target to Beroe’s two. Beroe’s xG of 1.73 was respectable enough, but the wider shot profile tells the harsher truth: they spend too much of these matches absorbing pressure and hoping the game stays alive. It usually doesn’t. Spas Delev levelled before Adil Taoui struck the winner in the 82nd minute. Another defeat. Another blow.
At home, the record is poor and there’s no dressing that up. Beroe have taken 11 points from 14 league matches in Stara Zagora, winning only twice, drawing five and losing seven. They’ve scored just eight home goals and conceded 20. That is one of the clearest numbers in the whole fixture. Eight goals in 14 home games means opponents know that if they avoid a mistake or two, they’ll probably be fine. You don’t need to be brilliant against Beroe away from home. You just need to be patient.
The biggest issue is obvious: they don’t carry enough threat. Nineteen goals in 29 league matches is a terrible return, and even when the xG gives them a hint of encouragement, the finishing and chance volume often don’t follow through. Still, there is one thing worth saying in their favour. Their games aren’t always complete walkovers. The xG projection here sits at 0.91 for Beroe, which says they should get into the match at times, and their recent away defeat to Lokomotiv Sofia showed they can still nick a goal. But asking them to hold firm for 90 minutes is another matter entirely.
Lokomotiv Plovdiv Form & Analysis
Lokomotiv Plovdiv come into this in much better shape, even if they’re not exactly dazzling. They drew 1-1 away to Botev Plovdiv on 8 April in a derby that carried a bit of edge, with Cătălin Itu scoring in the 23rd minute before Todor Nedelev equalised from the spot just before the break. Before that, Kosič’s team had won three on the spin: 1-0 at home to Lokomotiv Sofia, 2-1 away to Botev Vratsa, and 1-0 at home against FK Septemvri Sofia. That’s the sort of run that tells you what they are — controlled, disciplined, and usually in games deep into the second half.
Go back a little further and you hit the rough patch. They lost 1-0 away at Levski Sofia on 9 March and were hammered 5-0 at home by FC CSKA 1948 Sofia four days earlier. That was ugly. No point pretending otherwise. Since then, though, they’ve responded well, and the response matters more than the collapse itself. They are now four games unbeaten, and for a side in fifth, that feels much closer to their real level.
Away from home, Lokomotiv have been solid rather than spectacular. Three wins, eight draws and three defeats from 14 league trips is a decent platform, with 16 goals scored and 18 conceded. You can see why so many of their matches stay close. They don’t dominate on the road, but they rarely lose their shape. A draw at Botev Plovdiv, a win at Botev Vratsa, a narrow loss at Levski Sofia — those are all results that fit the same pattern. Tight margins. Low totals. Few gifts.
That trend is reinforced by one simple streak: eight of Lokomotiv Plovdiv’s last 10 league matches have gone under 2.5 goals. That’s not an accident. Their overall goal difference is 30 scored and 33 conceded through 29 games, which tells you almost everything. They are neither loose enough to invite wild games nor ruthless enough to turn control into three or four goals. The xG projection of 1.08 for them in this fixture fits perfectly. You’d expect chances. You wouldn’t expect a barrage.
Head-to-Head
There’s been very little between these sides lately, even if the results have swung around. Lokomotiv won the reverse league fixture 1-0 on 8 November 2025, which feels relevant because it matches the current shape of this tie: a narrow Lokomotiv edge, not a gulf. Beroe, mind you, have had their moments in this matchup, winning 2-1 in Plovdiv in December 2024 in the league and beating Lokomotiv 2-0 in the Bulgarian Cup later that same month.
If you want one broader angle from the recent meetings, it’s this: these games tend to stay compact. Seven of the last eight head-to-heads have seen fewer than 10.5 corners, which points to contests that are often broken up, cautious and short on sustained pressure. That won’t decide the result on its own, but it does fit the picture of another fairly contained game.
We Predict: Double Chance X2 & Under 3.5
Double Chance X2 & Under 3.5 at 1.70 is the standout play here. Lokomotiv are the stronger side in better form, and Beroe’s home record is simply too weak to trust — two wins, seven defeats, only eight goals scored at their own ground. Add in Lokomotiv’s four-game unbeaten run and their habit of playing low-scoring matches, and this market lines up neatly. You’re asking the visitors to avoid defeat in a game that probably won’t get loose. That looks very reasonable.
The xG projection backs up the same view without promising a landslide: 0.91 for Beroe, 1.08 for Lokomotiv. Tight game. Slight away edge. Beroe can contribute enough to make the visitors work, but they don’t look equipped to win a shootout — or any kind of open game, really. The correct-score call of 1-2 feels about right, with 1-1 the obvious danger if Lokomotiv’s bluntness creeps in. An alternative angle, if you want a simpler route, is under 2.5 goals given Lokomotiv’s recent trend, though the main pick gives a bit more room for that predicted 1-2 scoreline.