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FC Metaloglobus București host FK Csíkszereda Miercurea Ciuc in the SuperLiga relegation round on Monday afternoon, 13 April 2026, with both sides still trying to steady themselves after a messy run of results. This is the sort of game that can shape the tone of a survival campaign. Three points here would calm nerves fast. Drop them and the pressure tightens again.
For Metaloglobus, this is about arresting a slide after the humiliation at UTA Arad and finding some kind of home authority. FK Csíkszereda come in with a little more momentum in the wider sense, even if their most recent outing ended in defeat at Petrolul. They’ve already shown they can live in awkward, tight games, and in a relegation round that matters. Every point matters. Every mistake gets punished.
Metaloglobus arrive with a form line that’s been all over the place, and the last couple of weeks have dragged them back into a familiar kind of trouble. They beat FC Petrolul Ploiești 1-0 at home on 21 March, which looked like a clean, useful lift. Then they went to FCSB and came away with a creditable 0-0 draw on 13 March, before earlier results against UTA Arad and Universitatea Craiova suggested they could compete for long spells without quite finishing the job. The collapse came last time out. Away to UTA Arad on 5 April, they were torn open in a 5-1 defeat and the numbers were ugly: 0.37 xG, 23 shots faced, seven big chances conceded. That wasn’t a bad day. That was a battering.
What’s made Metaloglobus hard to trust is the swing between resistance and fragility. They can sit in, frustrate, and nick a result when the game stays structured. They did exactly that against Petrolul. But when they lose control, the whole thing can unravel quickly. The defensive record from the UTA game was especially rough, and the 4-1 defeat at FCSB back in February showed the same pattern. Once the pressure arrives, they don’t always get out of it. That won’t be ideal against a side that’s already found ways to score in this section of the season.
At home, though, there’s at least a base to work from. Their most recent home results include the win over Petrolul and the 2-2 draw with UTA Arad, which tells you they’re not just rolling over on their own pitch. They’ve also scored in enough recent games to stay in the contest, and that matters for a BTTS angle. The question is whether they can keep their own box secure for 90 minutes. On current evidence, that’s a stretch.
Csíkszereda’s recent run has been steadier, even with the defeat at Petrolul on 6 April. They lost 2-0 there, but the performance wasn’t empty; they produced 0.71 xG and forced enough moments to suggest they weren’t simply out of their depth. Before that, they drew 1-1 at home with Farul Constanța on 21 March, and the game before that was the impressive one — a 3-2 win at SC Oțelul Galați on 13 March. That was a proper away performance, open and alive, and it came after a 1-0 home win over Farul on 7 March. They’ve been competitive, which is half the battle in this phase of the season.
What stands out with Csíkszereda is that they don’t need chaos to threaten, but they’ve been dragged into enough of it lately to keep matches live. The 2-1 home win over FC Hermannstadt on 23 February, the 1-1 draw away at Petrolul on 1 March, and the result at Oțelul all point to a team that can travel without getting swallowed up. They’re not spotless at the back — few sides in this round are — yet they’ve shown enough attacking punch to score away from home and enough composure to avoid collapsing when they fall behind.
Away record matters here, and Csíkszereda’s travelling work gives them a live chance. The win at Oțelul, the draw at Petrolul, and even the recent defeat there all show they’re rarely passive on the road. They’re not a team you can assume will fade after 20 minutes. Mind you, they’ve now gone two without a win after the loss at Petrolul, so there’s no need to talk them up too loudly. Still, when a side has scored in three of its last four away league games and tends to keep the scoreline manageable, you normally expect them to find a route to a goal or two.
These two have already built up a fairly familiar rivalry across the league tiers, and the recent meetings lean slightly towards Csíkszereda. The most recent clash came on 4 February 2026 in the SuperLiga, when Csíkszereda won 1-0 at home. Before that, the teams shared a 2-2 draw in September 2025, and they also produced a 3-2 Metaloglobus win in Liga II in May 2025. That’s a decent mix of results, but the latest edge belongs to Csíkszereda.
There’s also a recurring pattern in this fixture: Metaloglobus have struggled to keep a clean sheet against them, and Csíkszereda have a habit of scoring first in these meetings. That matters in a game like this. If the away side land the first punch again, it could force Metaloglobus into a chase they won’t enjoy.
Both Teams To Score at 4/5 is the play here, and it’s the one that fits the shape of the match best. The projected numbers sit neatly on it as well, with both sides rated around 1.3 expected goals. That’s not a fluke. These are two teams with enough attacking moments to hurt each other, but neither looks secure enough to shut the door for long.
Metaloglobus have the home incentive, and they’ve shown they can score on their own ground. Csíkszereda, meanwhile, have been finding away goals regularly enough to keep this market alive, even in games they haven’t won. A 1-1 draw feels the cleanest read, and it fits the mood of the fixture: competitive, a bit nervy, and probably not decided by one team taking total control. If you want a slight alternative, the draw itself has appeal. But BTTS is the sharper angle.