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Buy tickets for TSV Hartberg vs LASK - Bundesliga (AT) Buy tickets for TSV Hartberg vs LASK - Bundesliga (AT)

Bundesliga (AT) (29. round)
26. April 2026. 14:30h
TSV Hartberg vs LASK
Hartberg Stadium, Hartberg, AT
2026
26
April
TSV Hartberg - LASK tickets for Austrian Bundesliga: match guide, stadium info, form and key storylines
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

TSV Hartberg - LASK tickets for Austrian Bundesliga: match guide, stadium info, form and key storylines

Looking for tickets for TSV Hartberg - LASK? Here you can follow ticket purchase options for this Austrian Bundesliga clash and quickly check team form, what is at stake in the standings, and what to expect at Stadion Hartberg before you head to the match

TSV Hartberg and LASK enter the run-in with different calculations, but the same level of pressure

By Sunday’s meeting in Hartberg, both clubs arrive from the upper tier of the Austrian Bundesliga, but with a different burden on their shoulders. According to the official table from April 18, LASK are second with 25 points and a goal difference of 41:37, while TSV Hartberg are sixth with 18 points and a record of 30:27. At first glance, that looks like a clear gap, but the schedule suggests the picture can change quickly: before travelling to Hartberg, LASK play Sturm Graz twice, while Hartberg have a two-match series against SK Rapid. That is why this clash is not just one more game in the sequence, but a potential point at which the chase for the top or the fight to stay in touch can turn decisively.

For the visitors from Linz, the calculation is simple. In April, LASK showed that they can strike at the strongest sides: first they dismantled Austria Wien 4:1 at home, and then they took a huge three points in Salzburg with a 3:2 win. Such a run raises expectations and lifts the dressing room, but it also raises the standard of demand. Dietmar Kühbauer’s team are no longer in the phase of hiding behind an autumn resit exam - they are now expected to show continuity.

Hartberg’s situation is different. Manfred Schmid’s team enter the run-in as a club that stubbornly holds on among the best, but in the final rounds they have lacked the finishing blow. A 0:0 draw away to Sturm Graz showed that Hartberg know how to compress space and suffocate the favourite’s rhythm, yet the 1:2 home defeat to Salzburg and the 0:1 loss to Austria Wien are reminders that every lapse in concentration at this stage of the season costs points immediately. For the crowd in Hartberg, that means one thing: the home side do not go into this duel as romantic underdogs, but as a team that must take something concrete if they want to stay in the conversation with the clubs ahead of them.

Tickets for this match have been in demand among supporters.

What has happened so far between TSV Hartberg and LASK this season

This is one of those pairings in which form and standings do not automatically turn into an easy prediction. In three league meetings this season, there has been no LASK victory: first 3:3 in Linz, then 2:2 in Hartberg, then 0:0 in March at the Raiffeisen Arena. In other words, in all three matches Hartberg found a way to stay alive against a team whose squad quality and ambition are aimed at the very top.It is especially interesting how those matches looked. There were goals, comebacks and phases in which LASK dominated possession, but did not fully break Hartberg’s structure. In the December 2:2, Hartberg led 2:1, and LASK fought back through Kasper Jørgensen and Moses Usor. In the March 0:0, everything was tighter, more closed and with fewer clear chances. That range shows that this pairing can go in two directions: either into an open game with transitions and plenty of space, or into a chess match in which one mistake decides everything.

The official league overview of head-to-head meetings states that the historical record is slightly in LASK’s favour, but not enough to give the visitors the luxury of relaxing. Hartberg have often found a route to goals and points against this opponent, and for the home fans that changes the psychology of the entire matchday. This is not a fixture in which a miracle is expected, but an evening in which the home side have a real reason to believe they can disrupt the visitor’s plan.

Who carries the home side’s game

When talking about Hartberg, the first name this season is Elias Havel. In the league’s official statistics, he leads the team with 11 goals and remains the most direct threat in the finishing phase of attacks. Havel is not important only because of the numbers. He matters because he changes the way the opponent defends against Hartberg. Defenders cannot step out too high, and the midfield must watch the space behind the first line of pressure. That is especially important against LASK, who love aggression, duels and a quick transfer of the ball forward.

Alongside Havel, Hartberg have several players who do not fill the headlines, but often set the tone of the match. Maximilian Hennig is among the team’s best providers with four assists. Tobias Kainz has three assists and brings calm in possession, while Marco Hoffmann and Lukas Fridrikas are among the names who regularly appear in the finishing phase of attacks. Hoffmann is also a scorer against opponents in bigger matches, and in games like these it is often precisely the player from the second line who proves decisive when he arrives for a rebound or a set piece.

For Hartberg, the variety of ways in which they create chances is also important. This is not a team that lives from only one pattern. They can wait deeper and break out through the wings, they can play more from the second line, and they can also punish an opponent from set pieces if that opponent throws themselves forward too much. Against teams like LASK, who are dangerous when they are given space between the lines, Schmid will probably ask for discipline without the ball and a quick, vertical reaction as soon as the corridor forward opens up.

Key TSV Hartberg names before the match


  • Elias Havel - 11 goals, the team’s leading attacking name

  • Maximilian Hennig - 4 assists, important for breaking out in transition

  • Tobias Kainz - 3 assists, calmer rhythm and quality set pieces

  • Marco Hoffmann - 3 goals, dangerous from the second line and set pieces

  • Manfred Schmid - the coach who gave the team a clearer defensive structure



Why LASK are dangerous even when they do not have a perfect match

LASK do not come to Hartberg only with a better position in the table, but also with an attacking profile that can break a match rhythm in ten minutes. Moses Usor is on 10 league goals and is the leading name of the visiting attack. Samuel Adeniran follows him with seven goals and five assists, while Kasper Jørgensen regularly gets into key zones, either as a scorer or as the player of the final pass. When Sasa Kalajdzic is added to that, it is clear that LASK have more varied solutions in the final third than a large part of the league.

What makes LASK particularly unpleasant is the fact that they do not have to play perfectly to win. Against Austria Wien, they exploited the chaos early and practically decided the match in the opening stages. Against Salzburg, they endured and hit back even when the game drifted into nerves. That is the sign of a team that has individual quality, but also the belief that the chance will come even when the match briefly does not follow the plan.

Kühbauer’s side usually look for energy, direct football and high intensity in duels. It does not always have to be beautiful for the neutral viewer, but for the visitors it is effective when they gather momentum. In that framework, first and second rebounds, the race for the second ball and the speed of reaction after winning possession are hugely important. Hartberg will therefore have to be calm on the first touch and solid enough not to allow LASK a chain of short waves of pressure.

Seats in the stands are disappearing quickly.

Tactical picture of the match: Hartberg’s compact defence against LASK’s width in attack

If this match is played to the home side’s tune, we will watch a game in which Hartberg close the central zones, drop the lines close enough to one another and force LASK to circulate around the block. Then the visitor’s patience and the quality of their deliveries come into focus, but also the precision of the final pass. Hartberg have already shown that they can survive in such a mode even against stronger opponents, especially when the match stays level or at a minimal margin for a long time.

If, on the other hand, the score opens early, a more open pitch suits LASK better. Usor and Adeniran then get more space for forward runs, while Jørgensen and the wide players can attack the far post or the cut-back to the edge of the box. In such a scenario, Hartberg must pay particular attention to lost balls when coming out of their own half, because LASK often create their greatest damage precisely from those situations.

Set pieces could be a major detail. At home, Hartberg know how to live off crosses, second jumps and crowding in front of goal. LASK, on the other hand, have enough height and strength to be a threat both after corners and after wide free-kicks. This is the kind of match in which one well-delivered free-kick or one poorly cleared ball can be worth more than half an hour of tidy play.

Because of everything seen in the previous head-to-head meetings, it is not hard to imagine a duel in which LASK have more possession, while Hartberg have the cleaner chances. That has already happened. A supporter coming to the stadium should therefore expect a match with plenty of tactical tension, and not necessarily an early festival of chances.

Profertil Arena Hartberg and what to know before arriving

Profertil Arena Hartberg remains one of the more intimate Bundesliga away trips. The official club website lists a capacity of 5,024 spectators for Bundesliga matches, four covered stands, modern floodlights, a heated pitch and around 500 seats in the VIP area. This is a stadium where the match is watched from up close. There is not much hiding from the rhythm of the game - you hear the contact, you hear the bench’s reaction, and every shift of energy on the pitch quickly carries into the stands.For a spectator coming for the first time, that is an important difference compared with larger stadiums. In Hartberg there is no sense of distance. When the home side enter a series of duels or win several balls in a row, the stadium amplifies it. When the visitors take control, the nerves can be felt as well. That is exactly why this ground often demands an extra dose of calm from favourites.

Practical information for arrival


  • Stadium address: Otto-Gerlitz-Platz 2, 8230 Hartberg

  • Capacity for Bundesliga matches: 5,024 spectators

  • Parking: around Hartberg-Halle, in Erlengasse, by the station, along RessavarstraĂźe and in the parking garage in the centre

  • The stadium can be reached on foot from those points in a few minutes

  • The external ticket offices open 2 hours before kick-off

  • The stadium opens 1.5 hours before kick-off

  • For the away sector, the entrances and ticket offices also open 1.5 hours before kick-off



Hartberg is convenient for travelling supporters because the town centre is small and easy to navigate. The town officially presents itself as a "Kleine historische Stadt", and town and regional tourism websites highlight the preserved old centre and short walking distances. In practice, that means matchday can easily be combined with a short walk through the centre, a coffee before the match or an earlier arrival without the major logistical stress that often exists in bigger cities.

Ticket sales for this match are under way.

What kind of atmosphere to expect on matchday

At stadiums like this, atmosphere is not created by size, but by proximity. Hartberg do not need to pretend to be monumental. Their advantage is that the crowd quickly get into the game and easily create pressure on the referee, the visiting back line and every disputed decision along the touchline. When the home side take the lead or build momentum, those few thousand spectators sound bigger than the number suggests.For LASK, this will be another test of maturity. A team that wants to stay at the top must know how to win even on grounds where there is not much room for either play or emotional comfort. For Hartberg, this is a chance to turn the home crowd into an active factor again, and not just a backdrop. The home side have shown several times this season that they can play tough, disciplined and brave against stronger opponents. If they do it again, the stands will come alive very quickly.

On the other hand, supporters arriving as neutrals can expect an honest Bundesliga match without much embellishment. LASK offer tempo, verticality and several serious attacking names. Hartberg offer organisation, a tough character and a stadium in which the visitor is not given a single free metre. That is a good combination for a match that could be much tighter than the gap in the table suggests.

It is worth securing tickets in time.

Sources:
- Bundesliga.at - official table, schedule, team statistics, top scorers and results of previous head-to-head meetings
- TSV Hartberg - information on Profertil Arena Hartberg, capacity, parking, opening of entrances and ticket offices, and pre-sale information for the match against LASK
- LASK - club news and confirmation from coach Dietmar Kühbauer, as well as the team’s recent results in April
- Stadtgemeinde Hartberg and Oststeiermark Tourismus - brief context about the town and the old town centre for travelling supporters

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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