Ferencváros TC host Panathinaikos at the Groupama Aréna on Thursday evening, January 22, 2026, with both sides eyeing crucial points in the Europa League league phase. The Hungarian champions sit sixth in the standings with an unbeaten record of four wins and two draws, while the Greek side occupy 15th position with 10 points from six matches. Robbie Keane's men hold second place in the Nemzeti Bajnokság I with 34 points, trailing leaders Győri ETO by just one point, while Rafael Benítez's Panathinaikos struggle domestically in fifth place in the Super League Greece with 25 points from 16 games.
Ferencváros enter this fixture with impressive European form but mixed results in January friendlies. They drew 1-1 with FC Midtjylland on Thursday before suffering defeats to Rapid Wien (1-0) and Holstein Kiel (2-0) earlier in the month. The hosts remain unbeaten through six Europa League matches and have secured progression to the knockout rounds with their fate in their own hands for direct qualification to the last 16. Stefan Gartenmann remains sidelined through injury, while recent departures include midfielder Alex Toth to Bournemouth and striker Barnabás Varga to AEK Athens. Davíd Gróf will marshal the defense against what he describes as technically gifted opponents strong on the counterattack.
Panathinaikos arrive in Budapest desperate to bounce back from a humiliating 4-0 defeat to AEK Athens on Sunday. That result followed more encouraging performances, including a 3-0 win against Panserraikos on January 11 and a 3-0 Greek Cup victory over Aris on January 14. The visitors have found stability in Europe with three consecutive unbeaten matches, keeping them in contention for knockout qualification. Benítez faces multiple injury concerns with Cyriel Dessers out due to muscle problems, Georgios Kyriopoulos sidelined with a cruciate ligament tear, and Filip Đuričić doubtful after picking up a knock. New signing Andreas Tetteh from Kifisia is expected to start up front.
The two clubs met twice in the 1965-66 European Cup first round, with Ferencváros advancing 3-1 on aggregate after a goalless draw in Budapest and a 3-1 victory in Athens. Nearly six decades later, the Hungarian side holds the historical advantage with one win and one draw against their Greek opponents.
My model backs both teams to score at 2/3 (1.67 decimal), assigning this outcome a 57.93% probability. I predict a 2-1 home victory for Ferencváros with expected goals of 1.85 for the hosts and 1.12 for Panathinaikos. Both sides have found the net consistently in recent European outings despite Panathinaikos' defensive collapse against AEK. The projected xG gap of 0.73 reflects Ferencváros' home advantage and superior European form, but Panathinaikos' technical quality should create scoring opportunities.