Cracovia welcome MZKS Arka Gdynia to Kraków on Sunday afternoon with both clubs still trying to steady a season that’s been far too uneven for comfort. This is an Ekstraklasa meeting that carries real weight at both ends of the table. Cracovia sit 11th on 36 points, three places above the relegation line of this particular story, while Arka are down in 17th with 33. That gap isn’t huge. It’s the kind of margin that vanishes fast if the wrong result lands here.
For Luka Elsner’s side, this is a chance to protect mid-table safety and put some distance between themselves and the mess below. For Dariusz Banasik and Arka, it’s more direct than that: every away trip feels like a survival test, and this one comes with their miserable road record hanging over them. One win away all season. That’s brutal. They’ve got the goals to nick something on their day, but they’ve also given up far too much on the road.
Cracovia’s recent meetings with Arka add a bit of spice, too. The sides played in Gdynia on 4 October 2025, and Arka won 2-1. That result will still be in the home dressing room’s mind, even if this is a very different game on a very different pitch. Cracovia haven’t been especially convincing in recent weeks, but at home they’re still far sturdier than Arka are away. That’s where the balance of this fixture tilts.
Cracovia Form & Analysis
Cracovia’s last month has been a mixed bag, and the story is familiar enough: competitive in patches, but not ruthless enough when games tighten up. They opened this stretch with a 0-0 draw away to Widzew Łódź on 20 February, a tidy enough result on the road, then followed it with a painful home defeat to Piast Gliwice, losing 3-2 in a game that asked serious questions of their defensive concentration. A narrow 1-0 loss at Legia Warszawa on 8 March wasn’t disgraceful, but it still left no points on the board. Then came another home setback, 2-1 against Wisła Płock, before they finally got back on track by beating GKS Katowice 1-0 at home on 21 March. That should’ve been the start of a lift. It wasn’t. Their latest outing was a heavy one: a 3-0 defeat away to Górnik Zabrze on 4 April, a match in which they were second-best for long stretches.
There’s a pattern here. Cracovia don’t get swept away often, but they’ve struggled to turn decent spells into results. Even in that loss at Górnik, the raw numbers weren’t disastrous in isolation — 16 shots to 16, three on target to four, one big chance to five — yet the overall picture was ugly, and the 3-0 scoreline told the story better than the balance of play did. When they’ve been beaten, they’ve often been beaten by a side that was cleaner in the key moments. That’s the issue. They’re not getting enough out of the chances they create, and when the game opens up, they can be exposed.
At home, though, Cracovia are still respectable. Their league record at this ground reads five wins, five draws and three defeats, with 17 scored and 13 conceded. That’s not flashy, but it’s solid enough. They’ve only lost three at home all season, and the fact they’ve kept the goals against down to 13 tells you they’re usually awkward to break down in Kraków. Mind you, the attack hasn’t been explosive either. Seventeen home goals in 13 league matches is fine, not more than that. They need control, shape and patience. If it turns into a rush, they’re not as convincing.
MZKS Arka Gdynia Form & Analysis
Arka come in with a little more momentum from their latest result, but their season away from home is still a disaster. Their recent run has been chaotic in the best and worst ways. They held Lechia Gdańsk 2-2 at home on 27 February, then lost 3-1 away to Radomiak Radom on 5 March. A 3-0 away win at Wisła Płock on 9 March briefly hinted at a recovery, only for a 0-0 draw with Widzew Łódź at home to stall things again. Then they were beaten 3-0 at Korona Kielce on 22 March. That one was sharp and clean, and not in a good way. But last time out, on 7 April, they beat Zagłębie Lubin 3-1 at home. That was their liveliest display in weeks. They led from the 15th minute, went into half-time two up, and after Michał Nalepa’s red card in the 48th minute they still found a way to finish the job. That takes some doing.
The attacking side of Arka’s profile is clear enough. They can score. They’ve put up 28 league goals overall and they’ve regularly found a way into dangerous areas, even when results haven’t followed. Their last six have included three goals against Zagłębie, three at Wisła Płock and another two against Lechia. That isn’t the record of a side incapable of hurting opponents. Still, the defensive side is a mess. Forty-five conceded in 27 league matches is the sort of number that leaves no room for panic, because the panic’s already there. Their defeats are often heavy, and when they’re off it, they’re really off it.
Away from home, the problem gets even sharper. Arka’s league road record is the worst kind of warning sign: one win, one draw and 11 defeats, with only six goals scored and 30 conceded. Six. That’s almost impossible to defend. They’ve lost away matches by 3-0, 3-1 and worse with ugly regularity, and even that lone win at Wisła Płock on 9 March feels like an outlier rather than a platform. Can they keep it tight in Kraków? They haven’t done it all year. The numbers are unforgiving. Their away campaign has been too soft, too open and too easy to punish.
Head-to-Head
Arka’s 2-1 home win over Cracovia on 4 October 2025 is the most recent meeting between the sides, and it’s the only recent head-to-head result that really matters going into this one. That victory will give Banasik’s team some belief, but it came on their own patch. Away from home, the picture has been much less steady for Arka in this fixture over the longer term.
Cracovia have generally held the upper hand across the broader run of meetings. They won 1-0 in Gdynia in February 2020, beat Arka 3-1 in Kraków in August 2019 and put three past them again in a 3-0 away win back in December 2018. There’s a little bit of everything in the history, but the home side here has often been the more reliable one. That won’t bother Arka. It should bother them.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
Double Chance 1X at 2/9 looks the right call here. Cracovia aren’t in sparkling form, but they’re far more dependable at home than Arka are on the road, and that’s the angle that matters most. Elsner’s side have lost only three times at this ground all season, while Arka have been beaten 11 times in 13 away league matches. That’s a gulf. A big one.
The xG projection is tight — 1.3 for Cracovia and 1.2 for Arka — which fits the idea of a close, slightly scrappy contest rather than a runaway. Even so, the home advantage and Arka’s dreadful away record are hard to ignore. A 1-1 draw feels live, and it’s the scoreline that sits best with the numbers, but Cracovia are the side more likely to avoid defeat. If you want a slightly bolder angle, Cracovia or draw with under 4.5 goals is the sort of bet that matches the shape of the game, though 1X is the safer, cleaner play.