FK Spartak Varna host FK Dobrudzha Dobrich in the Parva Liga on Friday afternoon, 10 April 2026, with both clubs still trying to drag themselves clear of the lower reaches of the table. It’s 13th against 12th, but there’s only three points between them and no real comfort either way. This isn’t a glamorous fixture. It’s a survival job.
For Spartak, the numbers are ugly. They’ve got 23 points, only four wins all season and 50 goals conceded already. Dobrudzha aren’t in much better shape on the overall table with 26 points and a minus-16 goal difference, yet they do at least sit a place higher and have shown a little more fight in the last few weeks. That’s enough to make this one feel more like a tense scrap than a free-flowing contest.
The route into this game has also been pretty brutal for both teams. Spartak were smashed 5-0 away to Botev Plovdiv last weekend, a heavy defeat that summed up their defensive frailties. Dobrudzha, by contrast, came from behind to draw 2-2 with Levski Sofia at home, with Kristian Dimitrov scoring twice in a late rescue act. One side is sliding. The other is hanging on.
FK Spartak Varna Form & Analysis
Spartak’s recent run tells a hard story. Before that 5-0 collapse at Botev Plovdiv on 4 April, they’d already lost at home to Ludogorets 5-1, gone down 2-1 to CSKA 1948 Sofia in Varna, and been beaten 4-0 at Slavia Sofia. Sandwiched in there was a 1-0 win over Montana on 3 March, but that’s the lone bright spot in a miserable spell. Four defeats in a row. That’s the reality.
The problems aren’t subtle. In that Botev defeat, they managed only five shots, two on target, and produced an xG of just 0.33 while allowing 3.23 at the other end. That’s not a bad day at the office. That’s a team being overwhelmed. They’ve now lost four straight and haven’t won since beating Montana 1-0 at home more than a month ago. Even that win was narrow and far from convincing.
At home, Spartak’s record is hardly reassuring either: three wins, four draws and seven defeats, with 17 goals scored and 29 conceded. Those are relegation-tier numbers, and the defensive record at their own ground is particularly worrying. They have conceded in four straight league matches overall, and 50 goals against across the season says they don’t often keep things tight for long. A home side in this sort of form usually needs a clean first hour to settle. Spartak don’t look built for that.
There is one little angle in their favour. Their home matches have tended to be a bit more open than they’d like, and they’ve gone over 2.5 goals in four of their last five. That doesn’t mean they’re suddenly dangerous, though. It mostly means games get stretched and they struggle to keep control. Not ideal when a rival comes in with a bit more resilience.
FK Dobrudzha Dobrich Form & Analysis
Dobrudzha arrive with a little more momentum, even if it’s hardly glittering form. Their last six read like a team caught between stubbornness and inconsistency. They beat Cherno More Varna 2-1 at home, lost 3-1 away to Lokomotiv Sofia, beat Beroe 1-0 in Dobrich, then lost twice on the road to Arda and CSKA Sofia without scoring. The sequence ended with a 2-2 draw against Levski Sofia at home, and that result carried some value because they needed late goals to claw it back.
The Levski game was revealing. Dobrudzha weren’t dominant — six shots, two on target, xG of 0.74 — but they stayed alive and made the most of what they had. That’s been their pattern more often than not. They don’t flood games with chances, and they don’t often run riot, but they can stay in matches. That matters here. Especially against a Spartak defence that’s been leaking goals for fun.
Away from home, though, Dobrudzha’s record is dreadful. Twelve defeats and two draws from 14 league trips, with just five goals scored and 24 conceded. That is a nightmare return. They’re winless on the road, and it’s hard to dress that up any other way. If you’re looking for a weak spot in this team, that’s the obvious one. They’ve been beaten at CSKA Sofia, Arda and Lokomotiv Sofia in this recent run, and they’ve failed to score in the two away games before the Levski draw. Can they really be trusted to produce much going forward on the road? Not easily.
Still, the flip side is that they’ve been a little sturdier than Spartak overall. Dobrudzha’s 39 goals conceded is still poor, but it’s a long way better than Spartak’s 50. They’ve also shown enough bite at home to beat Cherno More and Beroe, and they’re just about competitive in matches where the pace drops and chances are scarce. That’s why this feels like a game where they don’t need to be brilliant. They just need to be less bad than the opposition.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other well enough, and Dobrudzha have had the better of the recent meetings. When they met in Dobrich on 1 November 2025, Dobrudzha won 2-0 in the league. That result fits the broader pattern too: Spartak have gone ten straight head-to-head meetings without a clean sheet against this opponent, which is a pretty uncomfortable trend for a side already short of defensive confidence.
The clash also tends to lean Dobrudzha’s way early in games. They’ve been the first team to score in four of the last five meetings, and that’s no coincidence when you look at Spartak’s tendency to start sloppily and chase games from behind. This fixture hasn’t exactly been a gold mine for Spartak in recent seasons. Far from it.
We Predict: BTTS - No
We’re backing BTTS - No at 8/11 for this one. That’s the clearest angle in a match where one attack is badly short of rhythm and the other rarely travels well. The 1.73 price is fair, and it still appeals even with the projected scoreline sitting at 0-1. Sometimes you’re better off trusting the shape of the game than expecting both sides to find something they’ve rarely shown on the road.
Spartak’s home form doesn’t inspire much confidence, but it does point away from a clean open shootout. They’ve scored 17 and conceded 29 at home, yet their results often hinge on whether they can get going at all. Lately, they haven’t. That 5-0 loss at Botev Plovdiv came after a 5-1 home hammering by Ludogorets and a 2-1 defeat to CSKA 1948 Sofia. Those are not the kind of results that suggest a side ready to trade chances with purpose.
Dobrudzha are the other half of the argument. Their away record is awful — 0 wins, 2 draws and 12 defeats — but the bigger point is the five away goals from 14 matches. That’s tiny. They’ve gone blank in plenty of trips, and even when they do nick a goal, it’s often enough to nick something rather than spark an end-to-end contest. Add in the fact that this season’s average home and away games in the league sit around 1.30 and 1.11 goals per side respectively, and a low-scoring feel makes sense.
A 0-1 away win is the call. Dobrudzha don’t need to be spectacular to edge this, and Spartak don’t look strong enough to force the issue if they fall behind. Mind you, the one tension here is Dobrudzha’s recent 2-2 with Levski, which showed they can still be dragged into a more open game at times. Even so, that came at home. On the road, they’re a different and much blunter side.