Hartberg against Sturm Graz: a finale in which every point changes the tone of the season
TSV Hartberg and Sturm Graz meet in Hartberg in the 31st round of the Austrian Bundesliga, in a match that carries clear weight at both ends of the Meistergruppe. Sturm enters the final stretch as a team from the very top, in first place after 30 rounds played according to ESPN's table, while Hartberg is sixth, but close enough to the middle of the standings for a home win to completely change the impression of its finish. This is not a city derby, but it is a Styrian clash with plenty of local intensity: Graz arrives as the bigger club and a contender for the top, Hartberg as the host that, in its small stadium, can often turn a match into an unpleasant, physically demanding contest.
Tickets for this encounter are in demand among fans because it is played in the final phase of the season, in a stadium that does not have a large capacity and where a good part of the atmosphere is created precisely by the closeness of the stands to the pitch.
What is at stake
Sturm Graz has a clear goal: to keep the top spot or at least remain in a position that leads toward the highest European qualifiers. According to ESPN's table ahead of this round, Sturm had 31 points in the championship group after 30 matches, a record of 14-8-8 and a goal difference of 45:33. In the Austrian system with points being split after the basic part, the differences in the Meistergruppe are not large, so one draw or defeat can cost even the leading team dearly.
Hartberg was sixth in the same table with 22 points, a record of 9-12-9 and a goal difference of 35:35. That describes its season well: a team that is not easily broken, but one that often lacks the extra goal to turn a draw into a win. Against Sturm, therefore, the first thing will be discipline, and the second efficiency. If Hartberg survives the visitors' early pressure and keeps the match at a low tempo, the host can get exactly what it wants - a nervous encounter in which a set piece, a rebound or one quality counterattack decides the outcome.
Table and form through the numbers
- According to ESPN, Sturm Graz was 1st in the Meistergruppe ahead of the match with 31 points after 30 rounds.
- Hartberg was 6th with 22 points, with an even goal difference of 35:35.
- Sofascore states for this match that Hartberg scored 35 goals in the season, and Sturm 44.
- Sofascore also records 10 Hartberg and 11 Sturm matches without conceding a goal in the season.
- The last head-to-head meeting on 12.04.2026 in Graz ended 0:0.
Hartberg: a host that must play smart, not only bravely
Hartberg under Manfred Schmid cannot rely on possession dominance against Sturm. Sofascore ahead of the match lists Hartberg's average possession at 38.1 percent in the season, which shows that the host often accepts matches in which it does not have the ball for most of the time. That does not have to be a problem if the block is compact, if the wide players are aggressive in the first contact and if the attack opens quickly toward Elias Havel, Lukas Fridrikas or Marco Hoffmann.
The most important name in Hartberg's attack is Elias Havel. FotMob lists him as Hartberg's leading league scorer with 13 goals, while Lukas Fridrikas and Marco Hoffmann have added 3 each. Havel is the type of striker who gives Hartberg concreteness in matches in which it does not have a dozen chances. Against Sturm, his movement between centre-backs and full-backs will be one of the few ways for the host to pull the visiting defence out of its structure.
In the back line, Hartberg has several players that sources highlight for their performance. Sofascore lists Lukas Spendlhofer, Fabian Wilfinger, Jürgen Heil, Elias Havel and Tobias Kainz among the team's highest-rated players. That is interesting because defensive and hard-working profiles are among the first names, which fits the image of Hartberg as a team that must defend in an organized way before it starts thinking about taking risks with the result.
Sturm Graz: more ball, more pressure, but also greater responsibility
Sturm arrives with stronger seasonal statistics and higher expectations. Sofascore lists 44 goals scored for the visitors, an average of 1.5 per match, and 53.8 percent ball possession. That suggests a different match profile: Sturm will probably try to control the rhythm, keep Hartberg deep and look for space between the lines, especially through midfielders.
The most important Sturm player in that part of the game is Otar Kiteishvili. The SK Sturm Graz club website lists, in the first-team squad, his return of 14 goals and 3 assists in the season, which is extraordinary for a midfielder. Alongside him, Jon Gorenc Stanković, Tomi Horvat, Jacob Peter Hödl and Maurice Malone are important, while in defence Paul-Friedrich Koller, Emir Karić, Emanuel Aiwu and Jeyland Mitchell often stand out.
On Sturm's bench is Fabio Ingolitsch, a coach who, according to the club website, took over the Head Coach role in 2025. In this kind of away match, his decision regarding balance will be especially important. Sturm must attack because it is chasing the top, but it must not open the match in a way that gives Hartberg large space for transition. In Hartberg, losing patience is often more costly than losing the ball.
Players worth paying attention to
- Elias Havel - Hartberg's leading league scorer according to FotMob, a striker who can decide a match from a small number of chances.
- Lukas Spendlhofer - one of Hartberg's highest-rated players according to Sofascore, important for defensive stability.
- Otar Kiteishvili - Sturm's midfielder with 14 goals and 3 assists according to the club's first-team list.
- Jon Gorenc Stanković - a midfielder who gives Sturm duels, balance and security in the phase without the ball.
- Maurice Malone - a Sturm striker with significant minutes in the season, useful in pressing and attacking space.
Head-to-head matches: Hartberg knows how to shut down Sturm this season
The most recent head-to-head match gives Hartberg reason to believe. On 12.04.2026, Sturm Graz and TSV Hartberg played 0:0 in Graz, at the Merkur Arena, in front of 15,119 spectators according to ESPN's match summary. For Hartberg, that is an important detail because it shows that the host is not without a plan against a stronger opponent. A clean sheet in Graz is not a random little thing, but confirmation that Hartberg can withstand long periods without the ball and force Sturm into slower attacks.
The broader picture of head-to-head meetings is nevertheless on Sturm's side. FootyStats lists 21 previous meetings between them in recent seasons, with 12 Sturm wins, 4 Hartberg wins and 5 draws. The same source points out that the last earlier meeting before that review ended with a 2:0 Hartberg victory, which further shows that this is not a pairing in which the favourite always easily confirms the difference.
Tactical picture of the match
Hartberg will most likely seek compactness, plenty of running in midfield and quick balls behind the last line. If Manfred Schmid sets the team up in a lower or middle block, the key will be the distance between the midfield line and the defence. Sturm has enough technical quality to punish every gap between the lines, especially through Kiteishvili and Horvat.
Sturm, on the other hand, must be careful with patience. Possession by itself will not be enough if the ball keeps circulating in front of Hartberg's block without entries into the penalty area. The visitors will have to switch sides, attack the far post and use set pieces. In exactly such matches, centre-backs and tall midfielders are important, because one ball after a corner is often worth more than ten minutes of control.
Places in the stands disappear quickly for matches of this profile: a small stadium, the final stretch of the season and the visit of a team playing for the top create a combination because of which arrival is not planned at the last moment.
Absences and squad situation
With absences, caution is needed because lists change from day to day, and confirmed line-ups arrive only close to kick-off. Transfermarkt listed several important names for Sturm in the current injury list: Leon Grgić because of a cruciate ligament injury, Dimitri Lavalée because of a knee injury, Belmin Beganović because of ankle ligament problems and Filip Rózga because of a muscle injury. These are details that can affect the depth of Sturm's rotation, especially in attack and defence.
For Hartberg, publicly available injury lists are not equally precise and up to date across all sources, so it is safer to say that the host must count on checking the latest squad information ahead of the match. In practice, it is especially important for Hartberg that the players from the team's spine are available: goalkeeper Ammar Helac or Tom Ritzy Hülsmann, centre-backs Fabian Wilfinger and Lukas Spendlhofer, midfielders Tobias Kainz and Jürgen Heil, and forwards Elias Havel and Lukas Fridrikas.
Stadion Hartberg: small capacity, great closeness to the pitch
The match is played at Stadion Hartberg, which is also known as Profertil Arena Hartberg. The TSV Hartberg club website states that, for Bundesliga matches, the stadium has a capacity of 5,085 spectators, with 3,000 covered seats. It is one of those stadiums where the difference between an ordinary match and a full house is felt immediately: there is no large empty space, the stands are close and every visiting attack hears the reaction of the home crowd.
The stadium has three covered stands, a heated pitch, TV towers, commentary booths, a press area and lighting for Bundesliga conditions. The address of the event is Otto-Gerlitz-Platz 2, Hartberg, which is practical for fans arriving by car from Graz or other parts of Styria. Because of the stadium's limited capacity, it is worth securing tickets in time.
Practical information for arrival
- Address: Otto-Gerlitz-Platz 2, Hartberg, AT.
- Capacity: TSV Hartberg lists 5,085 places for Bundesliga matches.
- Stands: the stadium has three covered stands and around 3,000 covered seats.
- Arrival by car: for matches in the final stretch of the season, earlier arrival is recommended because of traffic around the stadium.
- Entrances: the exact opening time of entrances should be checked through the organiser's information ahead of the encounter, because it can differ by match.
Hartberg as a host city
Hartberg is a smaller Styrian town, which makes the away trip significantly different from going to large city stadiums. The advantage for fans is easier navigation and shorter distances, but that also means traffic and parking around the stadium are felt more quickly when a big opponent arrives. For Sturm fans from Graz, this is a trip that can be organized as a day trip, but it should not be left until the last minute.
The match at 17:00 gives enough time for arrival during the day, a shorter walk through the town and entry into the stadium without rushing. Anyone coming for the first time should keep in mind that in a small town the match can be seen even outside the stadium: shirts in the centre, groups of fans around the approaches and noticeably bigger crowds in the hours before kick-off.
What kind of atmosphere to expect
The atmosphere will depend on the result in the first 20 minutes. If Sturm scores early, the visiting fans can take over the soundscape, and Hartberg will have to come out of the safer block. If the host withstands the initial pressure or scores first, Stadion Hartberg can become an uncomfortable place for the leader. Exactly such matches often have the most nerves: one team plays for the top, the other to prove that it belongs among the best.
For a neutral spectator, the most interesting part will be the duel of rhythms. Sturm wants more of the ball and more controlled attacks. Hartberg will look for vertical transitions, set pieces and moments when the visitors open up too much. If the match remains low-scoring until the final stretch, every corner and every cross can carry the weight of a goal.
Ticket sales for this match are ongoing, and because of the stadium capacity and the importance of the final stretch of the season, one should not assume that the best places will remain available for long.
What a fan should know before setting off
This is a match for fans who love tactical tension more than open end-to-end racing. Hartberg will not want an exchange of blows with a higher-quality visitor, and Sturm will not want to repeat the scenario from April's 0:0 draw. The first half hour can therefore be cautious, but not unimportant. It is precisely then that it will be seen whether Hartberg can close the middle, whether Sturm can find Kiteishvili between the lines and whether Havel will receive enough balls for the host to threaten.
For Hartberg, the ideal scenario is a match with little space, many duels and uncertainty in the score until the end. For Sturm, the ideal scenario is an early goal, control of possession and forcing the host to come out of the block. That is why fans at the stadium will watch much more than an ordinary league encounter: they will watch a match in which the styles almost naturally pull in opposite directions.
Sources:
- ESPN - Austrian Bundesliga 2025/2026 table, Meistergruppe standings, records, goal difference and match summary of Sturm Graz - TSV Hartberg 0:0 from 12.04.2026.
- Sofascore - preview of the TSV Hartberg vs SK Sturm Graz match, seasonal statistical data, average possession, goals, clean sheets and highlighted players.
- SK Sturm Graz - first-team squad list, coaching staff and players' performances in the 2025/2026 season.
- TSV Hartberg - squad list for the 2025/2026 season and stadium data, capacity, covered seats and infrastructure.
- FotMob - Hartberg's seasonal performance, leading scorer Elias Havel and standout players by ratings.
- Transfermarkt - current injury list and Sturm players threatened with suspension.
- FootyStats and AiScore - head-to-head record between Hartberg and Sturm and context of previous head-to-head matches.