Djurgårdens IF host Malmö FF in Allsvenskan on Friday evening, 17 April 2026, with both sides still very early in the season but already trying to set a tone. Djurgården come in sitting second with six points from two wins and no defeats, while Malmö are fifth with four points after one win and a draw. It’s a small table this early, but nobody wants to be chasing the pack in April. Not when these two expect to be in the title conversation.
There’s a bit of pressure on both benches too. Jani Honkavaara’s Djurgården have started with energy and goals, and they’ll see this as a proper home statement opportunity. Miguel Angel Ramirez’s Malmö, who are never far from the top end of the Swedish game, know a result in Stockholm would steady them quickly and stop their opening away work looking undercooked. They’ve only played two league matches each, so there’s no time for drift. Every point feels like a marker this early.
The recent meeting history gives the tie a sharper edge. Djurgården beat Malmö 1-0 away in September 2025, but Malmö had the upper hand before that with a 1-0 win in Stockholm in March 2025 and a heavy 4-0 home success in September 2024. These two usually get a proper game out of each other, and the mood here is not one of caution. Both sides have enough attacking intent to make this a lively one.
Djurgårdens IF Form & Analysis
Djurgården’s last month has been a neat little mix of control and chaos. They opened their league season with a 1-0 win at GAIS on 6 April, a result that told you plenty about their bite on the road. Then they followed it up with a far more entertaining home success, beating Kalmar FF 3-2 on 12 April in a game that never really settled. That was the kind of match that can swing on momentum, and Djurgården kept finding answers. They’ve also had cup action in the mix, and while the 1-0 defeat to Hammarby in mid-March hurt, the broader picture is still positive. Two wins from their last three competitive games is a good start. No complaints there.
The Kalmar match was especially revealing. Djurgården produced 3.86 expected goals, 21 shots and seven big chances in a game where they were consistently getting into dangerous areas. That’s not the profile of a team scraping by. It points to a side that can create volume, pressure and, when the game opens up, real damage. The flip side? They did concede twice and allowed Kalmar to have five shots on target, so the defensive work still isn’t clean enough to feel bulletproof. At home this season, they’ve won once and lost once across league and cup use of the ground, with three scored and two conceded in league play. Good enough. Not flawless. And that’s the difference.
Still, there’s a rhythm developing. Djurgården have scored in four of their last five competitive matches, and their attacking ceiling looks high when they get onto the front foot. You can see why they’re sitting second after two rounds. If they bring the same tempo from the Kalmar win into this one, Malmö will have to defend properly. That won’t be easy for either back line.
Malmö FF Form & Analysis
Malmö’s latest league outing was tidy rather than spectacular, a 3-1 home win over GAIS on 12 April that felt controlled once they got going. They’d drawn 1-1 away at Örgryte in the league a week earlier, and before that had edged Landskrona 1-0 in a friendly. The only real blot in the recent run came in the cup, when they were thumped 4-0 away by Mjällby AIF on 14 March. That result still hangs around the edges of the picture, because it showed what can happen when Malmö lose the middle of the pitch and let the game get away from them. Since then, they’ve steadied. Four games unbeaten before that Mjällby loss? No. Four unbeaten since that loss. That’s a better story.
Against GAIS, Malmö weren’t dominant in a clean, ruthless sense. Their xG was 1.72 to 1.35 and the shot count was close, 12-11, with only four efforts on target. So this wasn’t a demolition job. It was more about getting the job done in a match that stayed a bit messy. They’re not short on threat, though. They’ve scored in both league games, and their overall return of four goals from two Allsvenskan matches is respectable. The concern is the away side of things. Malmö’s league away record is 10th, with one point from one game and only a single goal scored and conceded on the road. That’s thin. Too thin, really, for a team expected to challenge near the top.
There’s a broader caution flag too. Malmö’s recent away performance at Mjällby was ugly, and while that was in the cup rather than the league, it exposed a vulnerability when they’re pushed into uncomfortable spaces. Against a Djurgården side that’s already shown it can overwhelm opponents at home, they’ll need to be much sharper in transition and much calmer under pressure. If they don’t settle quickly, they can get dragged into a game they don’t want.
Head-to-Head
These meetings don’t usually go off in one direction for long. Djurgården’s 1-0 win in Malmö last September was a neat away result and a reminder that they’re capable of nicking big games. Before that, though, Malmö had taken the upper hand with a 1-0 win in Stockholm in March 2025 and a 4-0 home hammering of Djurgården in September 2024. The 2024 Svenska Cupen tie was wild too, ending 5-2 to Malmö, and then there was that 2-0 Djurgården win in July 2023 before a 0-0 draw a month later. Plenty of swings. No real long-term stranglehold.
One pattern does stand out. These fixtures have often been tight enough to tempt the unders, with seven of the last eight meetings finishing under 2.5 goals. That’s not a guarantee of anything on Friday, especially with both sides starting the league season in decent scoring nick. Still, it does warn against assuming this turns into an open shootout just because the front players have begun well.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 10/11 here, and it looks like the right call. Djurgården have already shown at home that they can turn matches into a chance-fest, while Malmö have scored in both league games and arrive with enough attacking quality to make a contribution. The xG projection of 2.2 to 1.1 leans the same way, and when you combine that with Djurgården’s 3-2 win over Kalmar and Malmö’s 3-1 victory over GAIS, you get a game that feels far more likely to produce goals than another cagey 1-0.
The tricky part is the head-to-head history, because these two have often leaned under. Fair enough. But that’s exactly why the price is decent rather than short. A 2-1 Djurgården win feels the best fit, with the home side’s sharper start and stronger home edge just about enough to tip it their way. If you want a smaller side angle, Djurgården to score first is live too, though the main bet remains the cleaner play.