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Buy tickets for Wolfsberger AC vs FC Blau-Weiss Linz - Bundesliga (AT) Buy tickets for Wolfsberger AC vs FC Blau-Weiss Linz - Bundesliga (AT)

Bundesliga (AT) (27. round)
18. April 2026. 17:00h
Wolfsberger AC vs FC Blau-Weiss Linz
Lavanttal Arena, Wolfsberg, AT
2026
18
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Werder Bremen - Hamburger SV, Bundesliga Matchday 30: Nordderby at Wohninvest Weserstadion

Looking for tickets for the Nordderby in Bremen? Here you can buy tickets for Werder Bremen - Hamburger SV and arrive prepared: the table stakes are huge, key absences matter (Friedl suspended, Stage doubtful), and matchday logistics help - consider tram routes, avoid last-minute queues, and note gates open 120 minutes before kick-off

Nordderby on the Weser: Werder Bremen and Hamburger SV in a match that changes the tone of the run-in

Saturday at 15:30 brings the Nordderby to the Wohninvest Weserstadion: Werder Bremen host Hamburger SV in the 30th round of the Bundesliga, and both camps enter this match with a very concrete calculation in the standings. After 29 rounds, Werder are in 15th place with 28 points, while HSV are 12th with 31 points - the gap is only three points, just enough for the derby to become a direct trigger for a calmer April or a nervous finish. Tickets for this match are in demand among supporters.

In its preview of the match, the Bundesliga emphasizes that Werder, after the defeat in Cologne, have only taken a small step backward - the third defeat in four matches - and that they are only three points above the place that leads to the relegation play-off. The same preview also states that HSV, although 12th, are only three points away from Werder in 15th place, so a win in Bremen could practically pull them away from the most dangerous zone and shift the pressure onto the home side.

What is at stake in the table: three points that are worth more than three

The position in the table itself makes it clear why this Nordderby is being talked about as a turning point. The official Bundesliga table (after 29 rounds played) lists HSV in 12th place with a record of 7-10-12 and 31 points, while Werder are in 15th place with a record of 7-7-15 and 28 points. In such a tight situation, a win is more than points: it is also a psychological “breaking the tape” before the last five rounds.

For Werder, an additional problem is that the pressure is not measured only in points, but also in the rhythm of results. In the build-up text, the Bundesliga states that the defeat in Cologne left Werder only three points above the place that leads to the relegation play-off, so it is clear that the home side on Saturday are not playing only for the derby’s prestige.On paper, HSV have a somewhat larger safety net. The Bundesliga states that “Die Dinos” are six points above the bottom three and that they have five matches to go, but at the same time reminds that they are without a win in four matches, including a heavy 0:4 defeat away at VfB Stuttgart. In other words: the margin exists, but it melts if the run continues.

Form and recent trends: Werder seek stability, HSV seek a reset

If you’re looking for one sentence that describes the mood in both camps - this is a derby of teams trying to regain control of their own story. The Bundesliga explicitly states that Werder’s defeat in Cologne was their third in the last four matches, which is a dangerous trend when you are in the lower part of the table.HSV’s problem is not only the defeat in Stuttgart, but also the impression. The Bundesliga states that Hamburg are without a win in four matches, and the dpa report after the 0:4 emphasizes that it was the fourth match in a row without a victory. If you’re a supporter coming to Bremen, this is information that tells you what kind of HSV you can expect: a team that will first try to stabilize its own structure, and only then chase rhythm.

In matches like these, a detail often decides it: a set piece, one lost ball in midfield or a red card. And here Werder and HSV arrive with already visible “alarms” from the previous round: Werder are without their captain, and HSV came to Stuttgart with a noticeable personnel gap in the back line.

Absences and question marks: who is missing, and who returns to the squad

Werder will certainly be without their captain. The official Bundesliga match page states that Marco Friedl is suspended after the red card against Köln, and a regional report additionally confirms that he is “definitely” out of the squad for the Nordderby. That is an important blow because Friedl is not only a centre-back, but also the player who leads the line and sets the rhythm from the defensive third.

At Werder there is also one big question mark in midfield. WELT reports that the club “hopes” for the return of Jens Stage after muscle problems and that a decision on his participation should be made after the final training session. If Stage is not ready, Werder lose part of their running power and verticality from the second line, and in a derby that often means fewer second balls won.

HSV come with several concrete absences and two key question marks. WELT states that Luka Vušković is still doubtful due to a knee contusion and that he did not train with the team during the week, while Albert Sambi Lokonga is also doubtful due to thigh problems. The same source states that Jean-Luc Dompé will definitely miss out.If you want a clean list you can check, Transfermarkt currently lists injuries for HSV to Yussuf Poulsen (hamstring), Dompé (foot), Vušković (knee contusion) and Lokonga (thigh problems), along with several other names from the wider rotation. That particularly changes HSV’s picture because Dompé and Poulsen are players who raise the tempo, and Vušković is, according to WELT, the “most important player of the season” for HSV.


  • Werder Bremen: Marco Friedl suspended; Jens Stage a question mark (muscle problems).

  • Hamburger SV: Jean-Luc DompĂ© definitely out; Luka Vušković and Albert Sambi Lokonga doubtful; Transfermarkt also lists Yussuf Poulsen as injured (hamstring).



Tactical picture: Thioune vs Polzin, two different starting ideas

The official Bundesliga page for the match publishes predicted line-ups and formations, which is a good clue for how both coaches might start. For HSV, the predicted formation is listed as 3-4-1-2, and for Werder 4-3-3. In a derby with stakes like these, that does not have to be set in stone, but it gives you a framework: HSV with three at the back and emphasized wing-backs look for width and an exit from pressure, Werder with 4-3-3 want control in midfield and quick wing entries.

The Bundesliga also notes a detail that in practice often decides the first 20 minutes: without Friedl, Werder change the way they defend depth and how they play the ball out. If HSV come in aggressively and force the home side into clearances, those “second balls” in midfield become the most valuable currency of the match.

HSV’s plan in 3-4-1-2, at least on paper, goes through vertical play towards two strikers and a creative “number ten”. In the predicted line-up, the Bundesliga mentions Robert Glatzel and Ransford-Yeboah Königsdörffer as the attacking pair and Fábio Vieira behind them. That is enough for you to know where Werder will have to close down: between the lines, in the space in front of the centre-backs.Werder’s predicted 4-3-3 line-up (on the Bundesliga page) includes Mio Backhaus in goal, with Romano Schmid, Justin Njinmah and Marco Grüll as players who can accelerate the transition. If Werder find space behind HSV’s wing-backs, precisely that speed and directness will be the first signal that the home side have grabbed the match.

Key individuals: who can decide the Nordderby

If you’re a fan in the stands, look for the duel that repeats: Werder’s wingers against HSV’s wide players. In the predicted HSV line-up, the Bundesliga lists Miro Muheim and William Mikelbrencis as wide solutions, and for Werder Olivier Deman and Yukinari Sugawara. These are the positions where the stadium most often “ignites” - one good tackle, one interception, one cut-back.At HSV, the first reference point is Robert Glatzel. When a team has no win in several matches, the centre-forward is often either the solution or the symptom. The Bundesliga puts him in the predicted line-up, and Transfermarkt shows that HSV have problems on the wings and with attacking rotation due to injuries. That can mean more balls played to Glatzel and more crosses than usual.

For Werder, what happens with Jens Stage is important. WELT states that his appearance is in doubt, and when you miss such a box-to-box player, a team often loses the ability to withstand opponents’ waves without fouls. If Stage is ready, it is a boost you can see even without statistics.

Don’t overlook the goalkeepers either. In derbies like these, one save in the 55th minute can sound like a goal. In Werder’s predicted line-up, the Bundesliga lists Mio Backhaus, and for HSV Daniel Heuer Fernandes. If you expect a “chess match” with little space, count on both coming into focus.

Head-to-head: tradition is a number, but also a reminder of tight finishes

In its preview, Kicker lists a “Direktvergleich” of 109 Bundesliga matches between these two clubs: Werder have 39 wins, HSV 35, with 35 draws. The Bundesliga on the official match page confirms the same framework and emphasizes how tight the Nordderby has been throughout history. That is good information for a supporter: as a rule, these are not matches that “break open” early, but encounters where the result is guarded until the end.

The current season has already produced one story. In its reminder of the previous meeting (Matchday 13), the Bundesliga states that Hamburg beat Werder 3:2, with a late goal by Yussuf Poulsen to win. When you come to the stadium, such things are felt: the crowd remembers, the players remember, and the coaches especially remember how the match slipped out of their hands.

Wohninvest Weserstadion: facts that matter to a supporter

If you are travelling to Bremen, it is useful to know the basic data about the stadium. The official SV Werder Bremen “Zahlen, Daten, Fakten” page lists a capacity of 42,100 seats and pitch dimensions of 105 x 68 m, along with the fact that the stadium opened on 17 October 1926. This is context that tells you how quickly the stands fill up and why logistics around the entrances often need to be planned in advance.

For the Nordderby there is also a specific entry organization. Werder’s “Faninformationen zum Nordderby” state that the stadium (Public and VIP) opens 120 minutes before kick-off, i.e. at 13:30, which is 30 minutes earlier than usual due to the planned choreography and expected high attendance. Seats in the stands disappear quickly, so it pays to plan your arrival so that you are at the entrance before the biggest crowd.

  • Capacity: 42,100 seats.

  • Stadium opening: 17.10.1926 (according to Werder’s data).

  • Entrance opening for the Nordderby: 13:30 (120 minutes before kick-off).

  • Traffic regime around the stadium: activated 2.5 hours before kick-off (recommendation to arrive earlier).



How to get to the stadium: car, public transport and Park and Ride

If you are coming by car, the official Weserstadion arrival page lists two basic routes from the motorways. From the Hamburg/Osnabrück direction (A1), the recommendation is the Bremen-Hemelingen exit, then follow the signs towards the city centre and the Weserstadion, reaching Franz-Böhmert-Straße via Pfalzburger Straße and Malerstraße. From the Hannover direction (A27), the Bremen-Vahr exit is listed, then continue via Richard-Boljahn-Allee and Kurfürstenallee towards the city, following the signs for the stadium.For the Nordderby, Werder’s fan information openly warns of “significant restrictions” and massive congestion, especially on Osterdeich, and recommends avoiding arriving by car if possible. They also state that the traffic concept around the stadium starts 2.5 hours before kick-off, which in practical terms means: if you are aiming to enter around 13:30, plan to be in the city zone already around 12:45, not on the approach roads.

Public transport is the cleanest choice if you want to avoid searching for parking. BSAG (the Bremen transport operator) states that trams on lines 2 and 10 run to the “St.-Jürgen-Straße” stop, from where you reach the stadium on foot in a few minutes, while line 3 runs directly to the “Weserstadion” stop. On days of high demand, special services are also added.

If you still want a combination of car and public transport, Werder’s fan information states that the P+R car park Hemelinger Hafen is available and opens at 13:00. For away supporters, a separate P+R at Arberger Hafendamm is listed, with a shuttle that starts at 12:30 and runs to the entrance zone around Gate 11/11a on Osterdeich.Ticket sales for this match are ongoing, and when the stadium is under a special regime, the best “purchase” is actually time: arriving earlier often means quicker entry and less stress.

Atmosphere: choreography, earlier entry and a derby heard across the whole city

What separates the Nordderby from an ordinary Saturday is the fact that the whole event is planned as a mass arrival. Werder’s fan information states a planned “large choreography” and therefore earlier opening of the entrances, along with a clear recommendation to all spectators to arrive earlier and follow the instructions of the stewards and the police. That tells you what kind of atmosphere you can expect: the stands will fill earlier, and the “first wave of noise” will start already at the entrances, not only after the first tackle.The Bundesliga reminds that this is one of the most evenly matched rivalries in the league (39-35 in wins, with 35 draws in 109 meetings), and such history usually means one thing on the pitch: fewer gifts. In practice, expect a match in which even a won throw-in and a blocked shot will get a reaction from the stands as if it were a half-chance. It is worth securing tickets in time.

What to watch on the pitch: three micro-duels that often decide matches like this

First: the space behind HSV’s wide players in 3-4-1-2. If Werder in 4-3-3 manage to switch play quickly and isolate a winger against the centre-back who steps out wide, they will get chances for cut-backs to the edge of the penalty area.Second: the zone in front of Werder’s back line without Friedl. The Bundesliga explicitly emphasizes how different Werder are without their captain, and HSV will try to slip the ball into the half-spaces for Fábio Vieira and the strikers. If the home side “close the pocket” there, HSV will be pushed towards crosses and set pieces.

Third: set pieces. When matches are nervous and tight, set pieces become Plan A. In such conditions, the goalkeeper and the first man at the near post often do a job just as important as the scorer.

Sources:
- Bundesliga.com (official preview and match context, predicted line-ups and formations, notes on form, suspension and the previous head-to-head match 3:2)
- Bundesliga.com (official table after 29 rounds: positions and points of HSV and Werder)
- Kicker (direct head-to-head record of 109 Bundesliga matches: 39-35-35)
- SV Werder Bremen (stadium data: capacity 42,100, dimensions, opening date; fan information for the Nordderby: entrance opening 13:30, traffic regime, P+R and shuttle details)
- BSAG (tram lines 2, 10 and 3 and stops for getting to the stadium)
- Weserstadion.de (driving directions from the A1 and A27)
- WELT (HSV squad information: Vušković and Lokonga doubtful, Dompé definitely out; Werder squad information: Stage doubtful, Friedl definitely out)
- Transfermarkt (lists of injuries and suspensions for HSV and Werder ahead of the round)

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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