OFI Crete and APO Levadiakos meet on Saturday evening in the Stoiximan Super League’s qualifying round, with both clubs still chasing a strong finish to the season. OFI sit sixth on 32 points, while Levadiakos are just ahead in fifth on 42. That gap in the table matters, but so does the fact that this is a tight, competitive mini-run-in where every point can reshape the final order.
For OFI, this is about keeping momentum going after a gritty win at Aris Thessaloniki and proving they can back it up at home. Levadiakos arrive with more points and the better overall record, yet their recent away form has been patchy enough to leave the door open. It feels like one of those games where neither side can afford to be passive. Goals should be on the menu. So should a bit of edge.
Christos Kontis’ side have spent most of the spring living on a knife-edge. Their last six league matches tell that story clearly enough: a home defeat to Panathinaikos, a strong 3-0 win over AEL Novibet, then that heavy 4-1 loss away to Panathinaikos, before a draw at Volos, a 3-0 home defeat to Olympiacos and finally the 2-0 win at Aris. There’s no neat pattern there. Just flashes of quality, then a reminder that the floor can drop away quickly.
Still, the win in Thessaloniki was no fluke. OFI were outshot badly in that game, 35-8, yet they were ruthless when it mattered and came away with a 2-0 victory. That says plenty about their edge in transition and their willingness to take chances when offered. At home this season, they’ve played 13, won six and lost seven, scoring 20 and conceding 17. No draws either. That’s a proper boom-or-bust record. You don’t get many quiet afternoons at their ground.
The bigger picture is mixed. OFI have scored 34 league goals and conceded 45 overall, which is not the profile of a side that controls games. They can hurt teams, especially when space opens up, but they’re far too easy to rattle when opponents get on top. That’s why their home results are so volatile. They’ll feel they’ve got enough firepower to trouble Levadiakos, but they’ve also shown a habit of letting matches slip when they lose shape. That won’t be easy to tidy up in one week.
APO Levadiakos come in with a stronger points return and a more polished attacking record across the season, but their recent form has been choppy. They edged Atromitos 1-0 at home on 22 March, a result that snapped a miserable run, yet that was only their second positive result in a string of six. Before that came losses away at PAOK and AEK, a home defeat to Panathinaikos, another setback at Kifisia, and a 0-0 draw with Olympiacos. It’s been the kind of sequence that keeps a manager busy. Too busy, perhaps.
Away from home, Nikolaos Papadopoulos’ team have been respectable without being convincing. Their record on the road reads four wins, four draws and five defeats, with 19 scored and 22 conceded. That’s not disastrous by any means, but it does point to a side that’s rarely in total control once it leaves its own patch. Their overall numbers are better than OFI’s — 51 goals scored and 37 conceded across the league campaign — so they do carry more end product. The problem is that the away version of Levadiakos often gives away too much the other way.
The recent defeat at PAOK was a particularly clear warning. They lost 3-0 and were second-best for long stretches. Before that, the 4-1 home loss to Panathinaikos and the 4-0 hammering at AEK exposed the same issue: when Levadiakos are forced to defend for long spells against quality movement, they can unravel quickly. Mind you, they’re not a side without punch. Their home win over Atromitos came from patience, and the season as a whole says they can score. But can they keep this one tight? That’s the real question.
The trip to OFI doesn’t look straightforward either. Levadiakos have won only four of 13 away league games, and while they’ve picked up enough points on the road to stay in the top half of this section, the margins are thin. They’ve also developed an awkward habit of starting slowly away from home — something that has forced them to chase games more often than they’d like. That’s a dangerous habit against a home side like OFI, who won’t need much encouragement to attack if the crowd gets behind them early.
Head-to-Head
These two have already seen plenty of each other this season, and the pattern is clear enough. OFI beat Levadiakos 3-2 in the league on 8 February, then followed that up with a 1-0 cup win in Livadeia three days before the opening of this preview sequence. There was also a 1-1 draw in the cup in Crete. That’s three recent meetings without a Levadiakos victory in the cup and league combined, and it gives OFI a decent psychological edge heading into this one.
There’s another angle worth keeping in mind. Levadiakos have failed to keep a clean sheet in three straight meetings with OFI, and that fits the broader picture of this fixture. The two clubs haven’t exactly played cagey football against each other either; the league meeting in February finished 3-2, and even when the scorelines have been lower, neither defence has looked fully comfortable. That history nudges the match towards both teams finding a way through again.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 4/5 is the play here. It’s a fair price for a match that has enough attacking threat on both sides and enough defensive looseness to give chances a real shot at landing. OFI have scored in spurts at home and Levadiakos have the better season-long attacking numbers, but neither side has looked remotely watertight lately. That’s the heart of it.
OFI’s home record is a strange one: 20 scored, 17 conceded, no draws, plenty of swing either way. Levadiakos, for their part, have been on the wrong end of several recent away matches where they’ve still managed to create enough to keep hope alive. The 3-2 league meeting in February tells you these sides can trade blows, and the projected xG line — 1.5 for OFI and 1.4 for Levadiakos — sits neatly with a goals-in-both-corners type of game. A 2-1 home win feels the most natural call.
If you wanted a second angle, over 2.5 goals has a live case too, though BTTS is the cleaner route. The scoreline expectation is still the same: OFI Crete 2-1 APO Levadiakos.