SK Slavia Praha host FC Viktoria Plzeň in the Czech First League on Sunday evening, 12 April 2026, with the title picture still very much alive at the sharp end of the table. Slavia are top, unbeaten in the league and eight points clear of the field, which tells you everything about how steady they've been all season. Plzeň sit fourth and are chasing the kind of run that keeps them within touching distance of the European places. One side is protecting a lead. The other is trying to stop the gap from widening.
For Jindřich Trpišovský’s team, this is about control. They’ve made a habit of turning league games into routine business, and home games especially have been almost spotless. Martin Hysky’s Plzeň arrive with a better away record than most teams in the division, which is why this isn’t a foregone conclusion, but they’ve also been prone to sloppier spells. That’s the tension here. Slavia look the more complete side. Plzeň look dangerous enough to make things messy.
There’s also a bit of recent history hanging over this one. The last time these two met, Slavia were involved in a five-goal shootout and came out on top again, 5-3 away from home in November. Before that, there was a 4-3 win for Slavia in Prague. These fixtures have had goals, drama and very little caution. You wouldn’t expect this one to be a quiet afternoon either.
SK Slavia Praha Form & Analysis
Slavia come into this game with the kind of momentum that makes them hard to argue against. Their most recent outing was a 2-0 win away at Baník Ostrava on 5 April, a clean, controlled performance that came after they’d already beaten Zlín 3-1 away, won the derby against Sparta Praha 3-1 at home, and edged past Liberec 1-0 in Prague. Even the one draw in that stretch, a 2-2 cup tie at Jablonec, didn’t feel like a wobble. They’ve simply kept going.
That run sits on top of a far bigger picture: 20 wins and seven draws from 27 league matches, with no defeats at all. That’s ridiculous consistency. Their home record is even more imposing, with 11 wins and two draws from 13 league games at this ground, 33 goals scored and only nine conceded. You don’t need to dress that up. Slavia are strong at home, they score regularly, and they don’t give much away. The league average home side scores 1.43 goals per match; Slavia are operating well above that line at home. That gap matters.
What makes them awkward for opponents is the balance. They’ve got enough attacking thrust to put teams away, but they’re also calm when games get scruffy. The 2-0 at Baník was a good example: not a wild, chaotic win, just a game they managed properly. They’ve now gone nine matches unbeaten since their last defeat, and that loss came all the way back in late January in Europe. In domestic football, they’ve been relentless. That’s the word.
FC Viktoria Plzeň Form & Analysis
Plzeň’s recent run is more uneven, even if there’s still plenty to like about them. Their last league match ended 2-2 at home to Teplice on 4 April, a game they should probably have won given the volume of chances they created. Before that they beat Bohemians 1905 2-0 at home and won 3-0 away at Hradec Králové. Those are strong results. But in between there’s a cup defeat at Karviná and that 3-0 league loss at Zlín, which still sits there as a reminder that their floor isn’t as high as Slavia’s. They can look excellent, then switch off. That’s the problem.
Their overall league record is decent rather than dazzling: 14 wins, seven draws and six defeats. Away from home they’ve been good enough to stay in the mix, with seven wins, two draws and four losses, scoring 25 and conceding 17 on the road. That’s a proper attacking return. They don’t go away from home to sit in, and they’ve got the goals to hurt teams. Still, conceding 17 away from home is not the mark of a side that can trust its defence against the best attack in the league.
The Teplice draw summed them up neatly. Plzeň were dominant on chances, huge on the shot count, and still couldn’t close the door. They’ve got edge going forward — no question about that — but if the game opens up against Slavia, they’ll need to be sharp at both ends. They’ve also only won one of their last four in all competitions. Can they really afford another slow start in Prague? Probably not.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has turned into a Slavia-friendly headache for Plzeň. Slavia have won five of the last eight meetings listed here, and the recent results have been especially brutal for the visitors. The most recent meeting ended 5-3 to Slavia in Plzeň on 9 November 2025, after a 4-3 home win for Slavia the previous May. That’s not a pattern you can ignore. It’s a warning.
Goals have been the constant theme. Five of the last five head-to-heads listed here have gone over 2.5 goals, which is exactly the kind of run that catches the eye before a match like this. Slavia have also scored first in five of five in that sample, and that’s a big part of why they’ve had the upper hand. Plzeň usually end up chasing the game. That won’t suit them here either.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/11 for this one. It’s the cleanest angle in the match, and there’s a good reason the price is short. Slavia’s home games are already productive, Plzeň have enough punch away from home to contribute, and the head-to-head record has been a stream of high-scoring meetings. Five straight in this pairing have cleared the line. That isn’t a coincidence.
The projected scoreline of 2-1 to Slavia fits the shape of the game. Slavia should have the edge, especially with their home record and their habit of scoring first, but Plzeň have enough attacking quality to nick a goal and keep things lively. If you wanted a slightly safer route, Slavia to score over 1.5 team goals is the kind of alternative that fits the same logic. Still, Over 2.5 looks the strongest call.