SK Sturm Graz welcome TSV Hartberg to the Merkur Arena on Sunday afternoon, 12 April 2026, in the Austrian Bundesliga Championship Round, with the hosts trying to tighten their grip on top spot and the visitors still chasing momentum in the upper half of the table. There’s plenty riding on it for both sides, even if the league positions tell slightly different stories. Sturm are first on 26 points and know a strong finish would keep them in pole position for the title race. Hartberg sit sixth on 17 points and still have something to prove in this section of the season, even if the gap to the front pair feels awkwardly large.
This is the kind of fixture that can look routine on paper and then turn awkward very quickly. Sturm have been the stronger side all season, but Hartberg have already shown enough resilience on the road to suggest they won’t just roll over. That said, the recent trend between these clubs is hard to ignore. Sturm keep getting the job done against Hartberg, and they’ve done it with a blend of control and just enough edge in front of goal.
The Championship Round only sharpens the stakes. Every point matters now, and for a home side sitting in first, dropping two here would sting. Hartberg, meanwhile, are trying to stop their season from flattening out. They’ve been stubborn, but stubborn doesn’t always pay. Not at this level.
SK Sturm Graz Form & Analysis
Sturm arrive in solid shape, and the win at SK Rapid Wien on 5 April was the sort of away performance title contenders are supposed to produce. They won 2-0, controlled the game with a 1.95 to 0.44 xG edge, and barely let Rapid breathe. Sixteen shots to five. Seven on target to none. That was a proper statement. Albert Vallci put them in front early, Seedy Jatta added the second after the break, and the rest of the afternoon looked comfortable enough for Fabio Ingolitsch’s side.
Look back a little further and the pattern is clear enough. They drew 1-1 with Red Bull Salzburg at home on 20 March, a decent result even if they would’ve wanted more on their own ground. Before that came a wild 5-2 win away at FK Austria Wien, then a tidy 2-0 home victory over SCR Altach. There was also a 2-2 draw at Wolfsberger AC and a narrow 1-0 home win over FC Blau Weiss Linz. It’s a decent run of six games, and more to the point, Sturm haven’t lost in seven. That’s the sort of stretch that builds confidence without needing any grand speeches.
The home record is a little more mixed than their league position might suggest. Sturm have won five, drawn two and lost five at home, scoring 13 and conceding 15. That’s not the profile of a side steamrolling everyone in front of their own fans. It’s a touch uneven. The positive for them is that the overall balance still leans the right way when they’re playing well, and their recent defensive work has improved. The flip side? They’re not exactly turning home matches into clean, uncomplicated evenings. You can get at them. Just not for long, and not without paying a price.
TSV Hartberg Form & Analysis
Hartberg’s recent spell has been more about resistance than results. The 2-1 home defeat to Red Bull Salzburg on 5 April was competitive enough for a while. Elias Havel got them in front, and for a brief spell it looked like they might nick something against one of the division’s heavyweights. Then Salzburg turned the screw. Karim Konaté and Sota Kitano flipped the game in quick succession, and Hartberg were left to deal with the damage. Their xG of 1.15 wasn’t bad, but the 2.01 they allowed tells the real story. Salzburg had far too much freedom.
Before that, Hartberg lost 1-0 at home to FK Austria Wien, and that one followed two away draws that at least showed some grit. A goalless result at LASK was solid enough, then came a 1-1 draw at home to Blau Weiss Linz. They’d also held Red Bull Salzburg to 0-0 away on 1 March, which is no small feat. But the big picture is less flattering: they’re winless in five now, and the results have flattened out at exactly the wrong point in the season. Manfred Schmid’s side are still competitive, but they’re not converting that into enough points.
Their away record is actually stronger than their league place might imply. Four wins, six draws and only two losses on the road, with 16 goals scored and 13 conceded, is a respectable return. They’ve been difficult to beat outside home turf. Still, draws have become a habit, and that’s the problem. Hartberg can stay in games, can frustrate, can make life awkward. They don’t always finish the job. In a match like this, against a league leader with more punch and more confidence, that lack of sharpness can become a real issue. They’ll need to be disciplined and brave. Anything less and they’ll be chasing shadows.
Head-to-Head
Sturm have had Hartberg’s number for a while. The most recent meeting came on 30 November 2025, when Sturm won 1-0 away from home. Before that, they beat Hartberg 1-0 in Graz in late September and had also taken the corresponding fixture 2-0 at home in August 2024. You don’t need to dig too deeply to see the pattern. Sturm win these games more often than not, and Hartberg have found it difficult to get much joy in the final third.
The broader run is even more one-sided. Sturm have won four of the last eight meetings, and they’ve gone 11 straight against Hartberg without losing. Hartberg have also failed to keep a clean sheet in nine of those meetings. That matters here. It suggests Sturm know how to control this matchup, even when the margin is slim. The goals often stay modest, though, and that’s worth keeping in mind. Four of the last five meetings have stayed under 2.5 goals. Tight enough. Usually.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing SK Sturm Graz to win at 4/6 here. It’s the cleaner angle, and the stronger one. Sturm are unbeaten in seven, they just went away to Rapid and produced a composed 2-0 win, and they’ve already beaten Hartberg twice this season without conceding a goal. Hartberg have spirit, but they’ve gone five without a win and their best recent away work has tended to end in draws rather than victories. Sturm should have more quality in the key moments.
The 2-1 correct score looks about right. Hartberg have enough about them to nick a goal — their away record isn’t poor, and Sturm’s home numbers aren’t spotless — but the hosts have the better attacking rhythm and a far stronger recent head-to-head grip. If you want a safer alternative, Sturm to win and under 4.5 goals wouldn’t be a bad shout. This probably won’t turn into a rout. It doesn’t need to.