Why this match matters
LASK and SK Puntigamer Sturm Graz enter Round 27 as part of the fight at the top of the Austrian Bundesliga, in a phase that official services list as the Championship Round. In such a schedule, every point carries more weight: gaps are smaller, and direct head-to-head clashes between rivals from the same “group” can decide the race for first place or at least determine who enters the run-in with a better starting position. On paper, this is a top-of-the-table derby — ESPN’s display of the Championship group keeps Sturm Graz in 1st place, with LASK right behind.
Tickets for this match are in demand among fans. The Raiffeisen Arena is compact, modern, and holds 19,080 spectators, so you can feel it when the stands fill up — especially in the home-fan zones and in the standing sectors. It’s worth securing tickets in time.
Current form and what the latest results say
If you want a quick “temperature” indicator for the hosts, LASK played a convincing home match against FK Austria Wien at the beginning of April and won 4:1 (05.04.2026). That result immediately tells you two things: LASK can break a match open on their own turf and has phases in which the attack runs at a high tempo.
Sturm Graz in the same period brings a combination of solidity and control: on 05.04.2026 they beat Rapid Wien away 2:0, and on 12.04.2026 they drew 0:0 against Hartberg. That’s the profile of a team that knows how to take points in big away games, but also how to “lock” a match when it isn’t going forward.
For a fan going to the stadium, this is also useful: the schedule says the same pair meet again very soon in Graz (22.04.2026), so the duel in Linz is the first part of a short series in which details, rotations, and discipline in duels will often decide more than possession.
Head-to-head: fresh history without much calculating
This season you already have two clear, easy-to-compare signals. In Round 1 (01.08.2025) LASK lost at home 0:2 to Sturm Graz. In Round 14 (23.11.2025) the picture flipped: LASK won 3:1 in Graz. That’s a good reminder that this is a pairing where momentum can quickly switch sides — and that there is no “safe” scenario.
If you want to watch the match through fan glasses, this is the type of game where the stands “ignite” early: one goal can force the other side into greater risk, and then transitions open up. Seats in the stands disappear quickly.
Who can decide it: key people and absences
First of all — check the absences. Transfermarkt’s injury list for LASK mentions Art Smakaj (cruciate ligaments), Krystof Danek (muscle problems) and Sascha Horvath (ankle injury). For Sturm Graz, the same list shows Dimitri Lavalée (cruciate ligament injury) and Leon Grgic (cruciate ligaments). It doesn’t mean they are all automatically out of the squad on match day, but these are names worth checking in official previews before you travel.
- LASK – reported injuries (Transfermarkt): Art Smakaj, Krystof Danek, Sascha Horvath
- Sturm Graz – reported injuries (Transfermarkt): Dimitri Lavalée, Leon Grgic
When it comes to the mainstays of play, Sofascore among the highlighted names for LASK singles out Andrés Andrade, Moses Usor and Melayro Bogarde, and for Sturm Graz Tomi Horvat and Otar Kiteishvili (along with goalkeeper Oliver Christensen). These are the kinds of players around whom a plan is often built: for the hosts through vertical entries and energy in midfield, for the visitors through creativity between the lines and composure in the final third.
On the bench you also have clear signatures. Transfermarkt lists Dietmar Kühbauer as LASK’s coach and Fabio Ingolitsch as Sturm Graz’s coach for this duel. That’s useful because it tells you the match will also be run with plenty of “chess”: reactions to changes, adjustments to pressing and risk timing after the first goal.
Tactical picture: where it can be decided
For the stadium, it’s most interesting to recognize a few zones in which the match usually breaks, without guessing formations in advance. First, the midfield duel: at home LASK often want to impose the tempo and force the opponent into more difficult build-up, while Sturm Graz from recent results show they are not afraid to play “for the result” and wait for their phases. Second, the wings and wide corridors: when they open up, you’ll get the most runs in behind and crosses — and that’s the part the crowd feels fastest.
A practical tip for watching from the stands: in the first 15–20 minutes, observe how each team defends the second ball after a clearance or rebound. If LASK consistently gets to the “second” first, it’s a sign the hosts will press for a long time. If Sturm Graz clears neatly and breaks quickly on the counter, the match will move toward patience and waiting for a mistake.
Raiffeisen Arena: what awaits you on site
Raiffeisen Arena is LASK’s home, built in 2023 with a capacity of 19,080. On LASK’s official website, key zones and amenities are mentioned such as ASK Stehplatztribüne, LASK-Fanzone, Schwarz-Weiss Tribüne, Familientribüne and Gästesektor — a good guide if you’re coming for the first time and want to know where it’s “loudest”, where the family atmosphere is, and where the away block is.
Ticket sales for this match are ongoing. If you’re aiming for the match experience “from the inside”, the home standing sector and the area around the fanzone most often deliver the most energy, while the family stands are a calmer option if you’re coming with children or if you want to follow tactical details without constant standing.
How to get there: public transport and parking without guessing
In fan information, LASK recommends arriving by public transport (LINZ AG LINIEN) and mentions the option of using transport from five hours before kick-off until midnight, via the Car-O-Mobility-App. If you’re coming from the city center or from Linz Hbf, this is often the most painless way to avoid congestion around the stadium.
For line orientation, the regional tourism service Oberösterreich states that the “STADION” stop can be reached by bus lines 17, 19, 46 and 45a (direct from Hauptbahnhof, in both directions), and by line 27 (stop BOTANISCHER GARTEN). This is useful if you plan to arrive earlier and want to put together a return plan after the match without wandering.
If you do go by car, LASK in fan information states about 1300 garage parking spaces in Linz and a special tariff regime valid from three hours before kick-off until 5:00 a.m. the next day (the text also specifies the special tariff amount). Since conditions can change by event, it’s best to check the current list of garages from the official announcement on the same day.
Linz as host: what makes sense before or after the match
If you’re coming from outside the city and doing a “day in Linz”, official tourist points naturally revolve around the center and the Danube, and it’s useful to know that Tourist Information Linz is at Hauptplatz 1. It’s a practical place for a quick map, advice on city transport, and a walking plan if you have a few spare hours before heading toward the stadium.
For fan logistics, the most important thing is: don’t leave everything to the last minute. Before the match, traffic and public transport can become “wave-like”, and after the final whistle everyone leaves in the same time window. If you’re aiming for a calmer exit, plan to stay 15–20 minutes or head earlier toward the stops — especially if you’re catching a return toward the station.
What to watch in the stands
Three concrete things you can “catch” live without statistical apps. First: who wins more free kicks in the middle third — that often reveals who dictates duels and tempo. Second: how often Sturm Graz escapes pressure with two or three quick touches and gets out to the flank; if that works, LASK will have to increase risk. Third: the reaction after the first goal — in this pair it has already been seen that the outcome can flip between August and November, so the match rarely “dies” too early.
In the end, it’s worth securing tickets in time — not as a phrase, but because this is exactly the type of match that draws neutrals too: a top-of-the-table derby, a modern arena, and the feeling that every ball can be a “turning point”.
Sources:
- Bundesliga.at – official Round 27 schedule and stadium/capacity data
- LASK.at – official information about Raiffeisen Arena (capacity, year, stadium zones) and fan information (public travel, parking framework)
- SKSturm.at – official results and schedule (recent form)
- Transfermarkt – list of injuries/suspensions and coaches for the match
- Sofascore – competition context (Championship Round) and highlighted players
- Oberoesterreich-tourismus.at – bus lines to the STADION stop
- ESPN – standings display in the Championship group (Sturm Graz 1st, LASK 2nd)