NK Istra 1961 host HNK Vukovar 1991 in the HNL on Saturday evening, 18 April 2026, with both sides carrying very different kinds of pressure into the meeting. Istra sit seventh with 36 points and can still push on towards the top half with a strong finish. Vukovar are stuck in 10th on 21 points and, at this stage, every point feels like a small rescue mission.
This is a fixture that already has a bit of history in the current league campaign, too. Vukovar beat Istra 3-2 in February, while the other two meetings ended level, 1-1 in November and 1-1 back in August. So there’s no mystery about these teams; they know each other well enough. The question is whether Istra can use home advantage to put distance between themselves and a side that have spent most of the season chasing shadows.
The numbers lean one way. Istra have been decent at home without being dominant, while Vukovar’s away record is bleak. They’ve taken just three points on the road all season. Three. That’s the sort of record that turns every away trip into a long afternoon, and it’s hard to see that changing in Pula unless they find something out of nowhere.
NK Istra 1961 Form & Analysis
Istra’s recent run has been a mixed bag, and that’s putting it politely. They went to NK Lokomotiva Zagreb on 11 April and lost 2-0, a game that was already slipping away before half-time after an own goal and a second Lokomotiva strike. Before that, they were beaten at home by Hajduk Split, 3-1, which is the sort of result you can live with on paper but not if you want momentum. In between those defeats, though, there was a timely lift: a 2-1 home win over Varaždin, and before that a 2-0 victory away to Rijeka. That felt like a proper statement at the time. It hasn’t quite been built on.
That’s been the story of Istra’s season. They’ve got enough about them to nick a result against stronger opponents, but they don’t always follow it up. Their overall record of 10 wins, six draws and 13 defeats tells you they’ve spent too long in that awkward middle ground. They’ve scored 34 and conceded 42, which isn’t disastrous, but it does hint at a side that can be opened up. At home, though, they’re better equipped: five wins, four draws and five losses, with 15 goals scored and 19 conceded. Not glamorous, but solid enough for a side in seventh.
There’s also a pattern worth keeping an eye on. Istra haven’t kept many clean sheets, and they’ve gone three league matches without one. That matters here because, even in defeat, they’ve usually found a way to create chances. The xG from the Lokomotiva loss — 0.78 to 1.22 — wasn’t flattering, yet the shot count was competitive and they had enough box entries to suggest the game wasn’t a total write-off. They don’t look like a team that’s miles off the pace. They just leave the door open too often. And against a team like Vukovar, that can still be dangerous.
HNK Vukovar 1991 Form & Analysis
Vukovar’s form is much uglier. Their last six league matches have brought one draw and five defeats, and the overall picture isn’t pretty: they’re winless in eight. That’s the sort of run that eats away at confidence fast. The latest setback came at home to Dinamo Zagreb on 13 April, when they lost 4-1. They did at least show some threat — Dion Drena Beljo scored twice, once from the spot after a VAR intervention and again late on — but conceding four at home to Dinamo isn’t exactly a badge of honour. The week before, they drew 1-1 with Lokomotiva, which was a slight step forward, yet even that felt more like damage limitation than progress.
Their other recent results tell the same story. They were thumped 6-0 at home by Hajduk Split, then lost 2-0 away to Varaždin, 1-0 at home to Rijeka, and 2-0 away to Osijek. That’s a grim sequence. You can find the odd moment of resistance, but not enough to suggest real control of matches. They’re conceding too early, too often, and once the game starts to run away from them, they’ve struggled to pull it back. The stat that jumps off the page is their away record: no wins, three draws and 11 defeats, with only eight goals scored and 30 conceded. That’s one of those records that tells its own story.
The flip side is that Vukovar do at least show occasional attacking life, which is why they’ve managed 28 goals overall and why they’ve not been blanked every week. Their xG against Dinamo was 1.70, which is better than you’d expect from a team on the back foot for long spells. Still, there’s a difference between creating a bit and actually living with the opposition. They’ve also been first to concede in seven straight matches, and that’s a rotten habit to carry into an away fixture against a side that’ll fancy its chances of getting on the front foot early. Can they keep it tight for long enough? That’s the key question. Right now, the answer looks like no.
Head-to-Head
These two have already met three times in the HNL this season, so there’s no need to guess at the dynamics. Vukovar’s 3-2 home win on 7 February stands out as the only victory either side has claimed in the pair’s recent meetings, and it came in a game where both teams got into the scoring. The other two contests finished 1-1, first in Pula on 1 November and then in Vukovar on 15 August.
That makes the pattern fairly clear. Neither side has managed to shut the other out in this fixture, and both meetings at the Vukovar ground ended with Istra avoiding defeat. For Istra, that’s a small psychological plus. For Vukovar, the February win will give them some belief, but it’s the sort of result that sits alongside a much broader run of poor form. One head-to-head win doesn’t erase eight league matches without one.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 10/11 here. That price feels fair enough for a game that should carry enough attacking traffic at both ends, especially with Istra at home and Vukovar’s defensive numbers looking all too generous. Istra have scored in enough matches at home to keep the tempo honest, while Vukovar’s away record screams vulnerability. They’ve shipped 30 goals in 14 away league games. That’s the kind of record that rarely survives a full 90 minutes without damage.
The 2-1 correct score feels the right read. Istra should have enough quality and home control to edge it, but Vukovar’s recent H2H threat and their ability to nick a goal even in defeat make a clean sheet look unlikely. You could also look at both teams to score as a secondary angle, but Over 2.5 is the cleaner play. Vukovar’s away record won’t hold forever. It probably won’t hold here, either.