GFS Panetolikos welcome MGS Panserraikos to Agrinio on Saturday evening in the Stoiximan Super League Relegation Round, with both clubs still trying to put daylight between themselves and the danger zone. For Panetolikos, this is about steadying the ship and making sure a poor season doesn’t wobble at the wrong moment. They sit 11th with 26 points, a record of seven wins, five draws and 14 defeats that’s far from comfortable, but still a decent cushion compared with the teams below. Panserraikos, by contrast, are in much tighter territory. They’re 13th on 17 points and have spent most of the campaign chasing games rather than controlling them. That’s the blunt version. They need something here.
The broader context matters too. These sides already met in March and played out a goalless draw, a result that fit both their seasons: competitive enough, but lacking a decisive edge. This meeting comes with the stakes sharpened by the relegation round, where every point feels heavier than it should in April. Panetolikos have shown just enough resilience to stay afloat. Panserraikos have been scrapping, but their away record tells a grim story. One win on the road all season. That’s not the sort of platform you want travelling into a fixture like this.
Giannis Anastasiou’s side are the favourites for a reason. They’ve got the better home numbers, the better overall balance, and they come in with a bit more momentum after winning 2-1 away at AEL Novibet on 8 April. Panserraikos, managed by Gerard Zaragoza Mulet, were held 0-0 by Asteras Aktor at home on the same day. It was another decent defensive display, but their attack still looked flat. Can they find enough in Agrinio? That’s the question hanging over the visitors.
GFS Panetolikos Form & Analysis
Panetolikos arrive here with a form line that isn’t flashy but is certainly healthier than it looked a few weeks ago. They beat AEL Novibet 2-1 away on 8 April, and that followed a 0-0 draw against Panserraikos, a 0-0 away at Panathinaikos, and a 2-1 home win over AE Kifisia. Before that, they had dropped successive away matches at Atromitos and Olympiacos, so the rough edges were there. Still are, to some extent. But the recent pattern is clear enough: they’ve become harder to beat, and they’re not giving games away.
That little unbeaten run matters. Four games without a loss can do a lot for a team’s mood, especially in a relegation round where anxiety tends to spill into performances. The win at AEL Novibet was a proper away result too, not a smash-and-grab. Kosta Aleksić scored twice, with Gaël Kakuta adding the late third, and Panetolikos also created the better openings. The numbers from that match were tidy rather than dominant — 0.87 xG to 0.97, eight shots to 13 — but they were sharper where it mattered, with three big chances to none. That’s been their theme more than once this season. Not perfect. Just efficient enough.
At home, Panetolikos have been solid without being imposing. Their record at Agrinio stands at four wins, one draw and eight defeats, with 15 goals scored and 23 conceded. Those are not numbers that scream security, and they’ve certainly had spells where the back line has looked vulnerable. Yet this is still a ground where they can find a result. They’ve taken points from tougher visitors than Panserraikos, and they’re usually capable of enough attacking pressure to keep opponents honest. The league averages suggest home teams in this division tend to carry a little more threat anyway, and Panetolikos at home do at least create chances.
The concern is consistency. They’ve scored in fits and starts, and there’s been a recurring tendency for matches to tighten when they should be putting teams away. Still, against a side with Panserraikos’ travelling record, that shouldn’t be fatal. If Panetolikos keep this compact and avoid giving away cheap transition chances, they’ve got the tools to edge it. That’s the job. Nothing fancy needed.
MGS Panserraikos Form & Analysis
Panserraikos come into the game having drawn three of their last five, and that says a lot about them. They’re not easy to blow away, but they also don’t win often enough to climb clear of trouble. Their last six have brought a 0-0 at home to Asteras Aktor, a 2-1 away win at AE Kifisia, a 0-0 draw at Panetolikos, another 0-0 at home to Aris, a 1-0 away win at Asteras Aktor earlier in March, and a 2-1 home defeat to Olympiacos. It’s a mixed bag, but the common thread is plain: low-scoring matches, controlled enough defensively, and not nearly enough punch at the other end.
That 0-0 with Asteras Aktor on 8 April was probably the most Panserraikos-like result of all. They had 10 shots to four and three on target to one, but the contest never really caught fire. Their xG was only 0.61, which tells the same story. They kept things tidy, conceded very little, and still never looked especially likely to force a breakthrough. That’s the problem in a nutshell. Good enough to stay in games. Not good enough to settle them.
Away from home, the picture is even harsher. Panserraikos have one away win, three draws and nine defeats, with eight goals scored and 31 conceded. Eight. That’s a brutal return. You don’t need a spreadsheet to see the issue. It’s just not enough output. They can survive in isolated matches — the 2-1 win at AE Kifisia proves that — but the margin for error on the road is tiny because they’re so rarely getting more than a goal or two. When the defence cracks, the whole thing tends to unravel.
They’ve also gone five matches unbeaten since their last loss, which sounds better than it is. The run includes three goalless draws, and that tells you a lot about the ceiling. Panserraikos are stubborn, yes. They’re also limited. Against a home side that’s already shown it can get the better of them on the road, that lack of attacking conviction is a real handicap. One win in 13 away games. That’s the hill they have to climb.
Head-to-Head
Panetolikos have had the better of this fixture for a while now, and the recent meetings back that up. The sides drew 0-0 in Serres on 22 March, but Panetolikos won 1-0 away in December and also beat Panserraikos 1-0 at home in May 2025. Go a little further back and the edge becomes even clearer: a 1-1 draw in Serres, a 0-0 there before that, and home wins of 3-0, 3-0 and 3-2 for Panetolikos in earlier seasons.
The pattern is hard to ignore. Panetolikos are unbeaten in the last stretch of meetings, and plenty of those games have been tight, cagey affairs. Five of the last five have gone under 2.5 goals. That’s the sort of trend punters notice for a reason. These two just don’t give each other much room.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing GFS Panetolikos to win this at 8/11, and that price feels fair enough for a team with the stronger home record, the better league position and the clearer recent momentum. Panserraikos have improved their resistance lately, but resistance isn’t the same as results. Their away form is still a serious problem, and with only eight goals scored on the road all season, you’d expect them to struggle to turn a draw-heavy run into something better here.
Panetolikos don’t need to be brilliant to get this done. A 2-1 home win is the call, and that scoreline fits the shape of both teams: Panetolikos just a touch more dangerous, Panserraikos competitive enough to nick a goal, but not enough to leave Agrinio with anything. If you’re after a narrower angle, under 2.5 goals has a strong case too. These fixtures rarely turn wild, and the recent meetings have all leaned that way.