FC Hradec Králové welcome SK Slavia Praha to the Czech First League on Sunday afternoon, and it’s a meeting with very different layers of pressure. Hradec sit sixth with 43 points and are trying to protect a strong season at home, while Slavia are top of the table, unbeaten in the league, and still looking like the side everyone else is chasing. One is fighting to stay in the upper half and keep momentum going. The other is guarding a title run that hasn’t cracked yet. That’s the simple version. The slightly less simple version is that both teams arrive with reasons to believe they can hurt the other.
For Hradec, this is a chance to test themselves against the standard-setters. They’ve been lively enough to make this a genuine contest, especially at their own ground, where they’ve been far tougher to handle than many would have expected. Slavia, though, are a different level of problem. Jindřich Trpišovský’s side have not lost a league match all season, and their away record is every bit as polished as their overall standing suggests. They don’t just travel well. They travel like champions.
There’s a bit of history here too. Recent meetings have tended to produce goals, and Slavia have generally avoided defeat in this fixture, but Hradec have made life awkward enough at times to stop it becoming one-way traffic. The league table says the gap is wide. The recent head-to-heads say Hradec won’t just roll over. That’s where the interest lies.
FC Hradec Králové Form & Analysis
Hradec come into this on the back of a proper away performance at 1. FC Slovácko, where they won 3-1 on 11 April and looked sharp from the start. Adonija Ouanda struck first, Martin Suchomel added a second deep into first-half stoppage time, and Ondřej Mihálik finished the job with two after the break. It wasn’t a smash-and-grab either. They created enough, controlled enough, and got the sort of clean attacking display that makes you think this team can ask questions of anyone when the forward play clicks.
That result came after a decent little home spell. Bohemians Praha 1905 were beaten 2-0 on 5 April, Baník Ostrava were edged out 1-0 on 14 March, and before that Hradec had gone to FC Slovan Liberec and nicked a 1-0 win. The only real blemish in that run was the 0-3 home defeat to FC Viktoria Plzeň on 8 March, which was a reminder of what happens when they’re forced to defend for long spells against a top-end attack. Still, three wins from the last four league matches is serious form. That won’t be ignored in the dressing room.
At home this season, the numbers are pretty healthy: seven wins, four draws and three defeats, with 20 goals scored and 11 conceded. That’s a decent platform. Not outrageous, not flashy, but solid enough to make them competitive most weeks. The clean defensive figure at home stands out more than the scoring tally. Hradec don’t usually open games up recklessly at their own ground, and when they do find a rhythm, they’re capable of turning matches in their favour. The concern is obvious enough: against the best teams, they can still be pinned back and made to live on scraps.
There’s also a subtle trend worth keeping an eye on. Hradec have been more reliable in the sort of tight game where one goal changes the whole mood, but they’ve also shown enough attacking bite recently to suggest they won’t spend 90 minutes simply hoping Slavia misfire. That makes them dangerous, but it also makes this a tough balancing act. If they chase the game too early, Slavia will punish them.
SK Slavia Praha Form & Analysis
Slavia’s last league outing ended goalless at home to FC Viktoria Plzeň on 12 April, but don’t let the scoreline fool you into thinking they were flat. They had 20 shots, six on target and 2.07 expected goals. That’s a proper attacking output. They just didn’t finish the job, and the late red card for Tomáš Chorý added a sour note to a match they probably should’ve won. That’s the flip side of being the dominant team: sometimes you can do nearly everything right and still walk away with only a point.
Before that, though, the league run had been ruthless. Baník Ostrava were beaten 2-0 away on 5 April. FC Zlín were swept aside 3-1 on 14 March. AC Sparta Praha were beaten 3-1 at home on 8 March in one of the season’s defining results. Dukla Praha were dispatched 2-0 away on 27 February. Go back further and the picture stays similar. Slavia’s last defeat in any competition was in late January, and in the league they remain unbeaten after 28 matches. That is a serious stretch. No luck involved. Just a team that keeps doing its job.
Away from home, Slavia are even more formidable than most sides can manage. They’ve picked up nine wins and five draws on the road, scoring 27 and conceding only 11. That’s the sort of away record that turns ordinary trips into routine business. They don’t need a perfect start to take control. They’ll settle, squeeze, and pick the moments. Can Hradec live with that? Over 90 minutes, it’s a big ask.
There are a couple of warning signs for Slavia, though they’re not exactly dramatic. The draw with Plzeň showed that when opponents stay compact and refuse to fold, they can be made to work very hard for clear chances. Even so, the chances were there. And if they produce that kind of volume again in Hradec, goals usually follow. One blank doesn’t suddenly change the picture. Slavia still look like a side that expects to score away from home.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings lean Slavia’s way, but not in a completely one-sided manner. The two sides drew 2-2 in Prague on 20 July 2025, Slavia won 2-1 at home in April 2025, and the reverse fixture in November 2024 finished 1-1 in Hradec. That’s the pattern here: Slavia tend to avoid defeat, but Hradec have done enough to keep the contests alive.
Go back a little further and Slavia’s control becomes clearer. They beat Hradec 2-0 in July 2023 and 2-0 again in the cup in December 2023, while a 1-0 away win in April 2024 added another tidy result. So, yes, Slavia have had the better of this fixture. Still, Hradec have found a way to score in enough of the recent meetings to keep the tension high. Both teams have scored in four of the last five head-to-heads. That’s not a fluke.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re going with Over 2.5 Goals at 5/6 here, and it’s the strongest angle on the board. Slavia’s away games are usually controlled, but they’re also full of territory, shots and pressure, and Hradec have found enough attacking rhythm at home to contribute their share. The expected goals projection sits at 1.4 for each side, which points neatly towards a match with room for three goals or more.
Slavia are unbeaten in the league, Hradec have won three of their last four league matches, and recent meetings have regularly produced goals. Put that together and a 1-2 away win feels about right. Slavia probably edge the quality battle, but Hradec should land a punch of their own. If you wanted a slightly more conservative option, Slavia to win and both teams to score wouldn’t be a bad alternative. Still, the goal line looks cleaner. 1-2 is the call.