On Tuesday, 23rd June 2026, Lahti host TPS at Lahden Stadion (Lahti) in Finland Veikkausliiga. We recommend over 1.5 goals as the standout selection.
Lahti arrive going through a difficult run, having recorded 3 wins, 2 draws and 5 defeats from their last 10 outings.
TPS are struggling away from home, with a record of 3W 2D 5L across 10 matches.
Historical meetings favour Lahti, who lead the head-to-head with 3 wins to TPS's 2, with 5 draws from 10 encounters. Both teams have scored in 100% of those meetings.
Our verdict: over 1.5 goals at odds of 1.25 represents the most compelling value in this fixture.
Let me be honest with you about how this Finland Veikkausliiga match looks once you strip away the noise. The pundits will give you a narrative. We are going to give you the evidence and let you decide whether it adds up.
The home team rolls in on 2 wins, 3 losses from their last 5 games. Now, plenty of people will see that and stop reading, which is exactly the mistake the bookmakers are counting on. A recent run only means something when you understand why it happened. Were the wins built on solid defending and clinical finishing, or did they ride their luck and survive a couple of scares? Five matches is enough of a sample to spot the difference, and the difference is where the money is.
Across from them, the away side brings 1 win, 4 losses from their last 5 games on their travels. Road form is the great separator in this sport. A team that knows how to grind out a result in someone else’s backyard is worth a completely different price than one that folds the moment things get uncomfortable. We have watched closely for which of those two this lot resembles right now.
Put the home and away pictures side by side and the value reveals itself. The bookies have set their line; we think it is a touch off. Our angle is Over 1.5 at @1.25, sitting at roughly 100% in our model. The match gets going at 4:00 pm over at Lahden Stadion (Lahti).
That is the read. Take it, leave it, or fold it into a slip with our other tips today — but at least now you know the reasoning behind it.