UTA Arad welcome FC Botoșani on Saturday evening in the SuperLiga relegation round, and both sides arrive with very different moods but the same basic need: points, fast. This phase of the season is all about survival, rhythm and nerve, and neither club can afford to drift through a game like this. UTA have just thumped FC Metaloglobus București 5-1, while Botoșani edged FCSB 3-2 in a result that’ll have turned a few heads around the division.
There’s no league table here to lean on, but the context is obvious enough. The relegation round tends to punish sides that get sloppy at the back and passive in transition. These two haven’t been shy in front of goal lately, though, and that’s what makes this fixture worth watching. Adrian Mihalcea’s UTA have scored eight in their last two home league matches. Marius Croitoru’s Botoșani have scored three against FCSB and three more against AFC Unirea 04 Slobozia in their recent spell. Clean sheets? Not really their thing. That’s the problem for both defences. And the reason this could be lively.
UTA Arad Form & Analysis
UTA Arad’s recent form has been a bit of a rollercoaster, but the most recent ride was their most convincing. At home against FC Metaloglobus București on 5 April, they ripped into the game and never let up, winning 5-1 with authority. Dmytro Pospelov opened the scoring, Flavius Iacob added another before half-time, and once Hakim Abdallah converted a penalty after the break, the contest was done. Marius Coman and Yassine Zakir both got involved too, and Pospelov rounded things off deep into stoppage time. That wasn’t a smash-and-grab. It was a proper battering.
Before that, though, the picture was less tidy. UTA lost 1-0 away to FCSB on 20 March, and while that result isn’t embarrassing in itself, it came after a 3-2 home win over FC Hermannstadt that had already shown their taste for open games. Then you go back a little further and the pattern becomes clear: 2-2 away at FC Metaloglobus București, a wild 2-4 home defeat to FCSB, and another 2-2 draw at SC Oțelul Galați. They’ve been involved in matches with goals at both ends for weeks. There’s no real settling them down. That can be a gift or a curse.
At home, UTA have looked especially dangerous. The recent 5-1 win followed the 3-2 success over Hermannstadt, and that tells its own story: they’re creating chances, and plenty of them. Their home attacking return has been strong, but they’ve also shown a willingness to open the door at the back. That 2-4 loss to FCSB at their own ground still hangs around the form line. The upside is obvious. The downside is just as plain. UTA won’t bore anyone, but they don’t exactly lock games down either.
There’s also a useful streak to keep in mind. UTA have gone over 2.5 goals in six of their last eight matches, which fits neatly with the mood of their recent performances. They’re not grinding these games out. They’re playing them on the front foot, and you’d expect that approach to continue here with a home crowd behind them.
FC Botoșani Form & Analysis
FC Botoșani come into this one with a result that says plenty about their ceiling when everything clicks. On 3 April they beat FCSB 3-2 at home, and it was a proper statement. They were sharp early, with Darius Olaru striking after four minutes and Hervin Ongenda adding another before the interval. Florin Tănase’s penalty gave the game a different texture, but Ongenda struck again in the second half and Sebastian Mailat finished the job. That’s the version of Botoșani nobody wants to face: sharp, direct and willing to trade blows.
The trouble is that their last few away games have been much harder to stomach. Before that FCSB win, they were beaten 3-0 away by FC Hermannstadt on 22 March, a match where they never really got into the contest. They’d also beaten AFC Unirea 04 Slobozia 3-2 at home, but that followed a 1-0 home defeat to FC Petrolul Ploiești and a run of losses that included 3-1 at FC Hermannstadt and 1-3 at home to FC Universitatea Cluj. The recent results haven’t exactly been stable. One big win, then a rough away showing. That’s the theme.
Away from home, Botoșani have been shaky enough to trust only in short bursts. They were beaten 3-0 at Hermannstadt, and earlier in the broader run they also lost 3-1 on that same ground in February. That’s a lot of goals conceded on the road. A lot. Their issue isn’t just losing away matches; it’s the way they can unravel once the game starts moving at pace. Still, they’ve shown they can score in bunches too, which is why their away trips usually carry a goal-heavy feel rather than a cautious one.
There’s a striking broader trend here as well: Botoșani have seen over 2.5 goals land in nine of their last ten matches. That’s not a quirky little sample. That’s a pattern. Their matches are usually messy, open and decided by momentum swings rather than control. Can they keep it tight enough here to slow UTA down? The recent evidence says no.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has quietly become one of those match-ups that keeps delivering something. UTA Arad beat FC Botoșani 2-1 in February, and that followed a 2-1 Botoșani win in October. Go back a little further and UTA had the better of it again, winning 1-0 in April 2025, then 2-0 in December 2024. The pattern before that was a bit more balanced, with a 1-0 Botoșani win in August 2024 and two 2-2 draws in early 2024 and late 2023.
One angle stands out from those meetings: both teams have scored in six of the last eight head-to-heads. That fits the recent form nicely. These games don’t usually die in a corner. They tend to get stretched.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 10/11 here, and it’s hard to argue with the price. UTA have just put five past Metaloglobus and have been involved in goal-heavy games for most of the spring, while Botoșani have turned their last ten into a parade of open matches. That’s a dangerous combination for anyone hoping for a tidy, low-scoring contest. It probably won’t happen.
The numbers point the same way as the eye test. UTA have been strong going forward at home but far less convincing at the back, and Botoșani have the kind of away profile that tends to drag matches into chaos. A 2-1 home win feels the likeliest scoreline, with UTA’s extra stability at home just enough to tip it. If you wanted a secondary angle, both teams to score also has a strong case — these two have made a habit of finding the net even when the game’s been messy.