ETO FC Győr host Ferencváros TC on Sunday evening in NB I with the title race hanging over it like a low cloud. This is first versus second, but only on paper. Both clubs sit on 59 points, so there’s no real separation at all, just a scrap of goal difference and nerves. One of them will leave with a proper edge in the championship chase; the other will be left looking over their shoulder.
For Ferencváros, the pressure is obvious. Robbie Keane’s side have spent long stretches of the season where the expectation is simple: win, and keep winning. ETO’s rise has been more of a punch-the-air story, but Balazs Borbely’s team aren’t here to admire the scenery. They’ve earned this shot. Their home record is strong, their recent away win at Puskás Akadémia was emphatic, and they’ve got enough firepower to make life awkward for anyone.
The wider context makes this even better. ETO have gone unbeaten in four league matches, while Ferencváros arrive on a four-game unbeaten run of their own in all competitions since that heavy loss in Braga. Both sides have shown they can score in bursts. Both have defensive gaps. That’s why this feels like a game where momentum matters, but clean sheets probably won’t.
ETO FC Győr Form & Analysis
ETO’s recent run has been lively, and the 4-1 win at Puskás Akadémia on 10 April was the kind of result that turns heads. Away from home, they didn’t just nick it — they blew the game open. Milán Vitális got them going early, Márk Csinger doubled the lead after the break, and then Ahmed Nadhir Benbouali, Nfansu Njie and Zsolt Magyar all had their say. That was a proper statement. Three days earlier, they’d beaten Nyiregyháza Spartacus 1-0 at home, which wasn’t as glamorous but mattered just as much. You don’t stay in a title race by only playing well once in a while.
Before that came a 3-1 win at Kazincbarcikai SC and a 0-0 draw with MTK Budapest at home. The only blemish in the recent league sequence was the 2-1 defeat at Zalaegerszegi TE on 7 March, and even that feels a while away now. Since then, ETO have tightened up enough to stay unbeaten across four league outings. They’ve also shown they can win in different ways — controlled at home, aggressive away, and stubborn when needed. That’s a decent mix. It’s not flawless, but it’s dangerous.
Their home record is one of the reasons they’re sitting this high. ETO have won eight, drawn four and lost only twice at their own ground, scoring 19 and conceding nine. That’s a seriously solid base. They don’t just rely on moments either; they’ve been hard to beat in Győr, and the low goals-against number tells you they’re usually organised there. Still, there’s a slight tension in the numbers. Nineteen home goals across 14 matches isn’t exactly wild, so while they’re efficient, they’re not always relentless. Against the top side in the league, that efficiency will need to show up again.
What does help their case is the way they’re creating and finishing chances lately. The win at Puskás was built on a healthy attacking balance, with 18 shots, seven on target and two big chances. Their league position says they belong in this sort of fixture. Their home figures say they can live with it. The question is whether they can contain Ferencváros for long enough. That’s the hard part.
Ferencváros TC Form & Analysis
Ferencváros come into this with the feel of a side that knows exactly what it is. They don’t have to dominate every game from first whistle to last. They just keep finding enough quality to decide matches. Their last four league outings have brought wins over Puskás Akadémia, Diósgyőri VTK and Debreceni VSC, plus a draw at Kisvárda FC. The 2-1 home win over Puskás on 14 April was the latest proof. It wasn’t perfect — they allowed chances — but they still got over the line. Dániel Lukács, Lenny Joseph and Gabi Kanichowsky all got involved in the scoring before the break, and that tells you plenty about how quickly they can hurt teams.
Before that, they beat Diósgyőri VTK 3-1 and won 2-0 away at Debreceni VSC. That away result matters here. Ferencváros don’t just travel well; they travel like champions. Their league away record is outstanding: 11 wins, three draws and only one defeat, with 29 goals scored and 11 conceded. That’s the sort of record that travels into a title decider and gives you confidence. They’ve been ruthless enough on the road to take control of matches, but not so reckless that they’re giving away cheap goals by the bucketful.
The one obvious bump in the road was the 4-0 loss at Sporting Braga in the Europa League knockouts. That was a tough evening, no doubt about it, but the reaction has been good. They beat Braga 2-0 at home in the first leg, which is the kind of result that showed their level. Since the heavy defeat in Portugal, they’ve gone four matches unbeaten. Robbie Keane will like that. So will the travelling support. The team haven’t let one European beating define them.
There’s a slight question over whether Ferencváros always keep things tight enough to make this feel safe. Their last three league wins all came with goals conceded? No, not all of them, but they’ve been open enough at times to invite pressure. The 2-1 win over Puskás was a good example. They got the job done, yet they weren’t locked in for the full 90 minutes. That’s fine against a lot of sides. Against ETO, it could make this a proper contest. Even so, their away record is too strong to ignore, and their attacking output away from home is the best in the division.
Head-to-Head
These two have already produced a few sharp meetings, and the recent pattern leans towards goals. ETO beat Ferencváros 3-1 in Budapest on 25 January 2026, which was a big result and a reminder that this isn’t some one-sided pairing. Ferencváros had their revenge in September with a 2-0 home win, and there was also a 2-2 draw in March 2025 plus a 1-1 draw at ETO in October that year. In other words, when these sides meet, it usually doesn’t drift quietly.
The more recent head-to-heads suggest a game with plenty of action. Three of the last four league meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and six of the last seven have seen both teams score. That fits the broader shape of this fixture. ETO have also shown they can make Ferencváros uncomfortable, especially when the game opens up. The visitors have often had to work for their points here. They probably will again.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/13 here, and it’s the cleanest angle on the board. You’ve got first versus second, both on 59 points, both scoring well, both carrying real attacking form, and both with recent defensive lapses that make a low-scoring chess match feel unlikely. ETO have scored 58 in the league and Ferencváros 57, so there’s plenty of output between them. The home side have just put four past Puskás away from home. Ferencváros have scored three, two and two in three of their last four league games. That’s enough for a goals call.
The 1-2 correct score also fits. Ferencváros’ away record is stronger, and their ability to win tight games on the road gives them a slight edge. But ETO’s home form and recent attacking surge mean they should contribute as well. This doesn’t scream 0-1 or 0-0. It feels more like both teams scoring, with the visitors having that extra bit of polish when it matters. If you wanted a small alternative, Ferencváros to win and both teams to score is worth a look, but Over 2.5 remains the best play.