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UEFA Champions League

Dinamo Zagreb Arrive in Form as Struggling Thun Face Champions League Baptism of Fire

FC Thun welcome Dinamo Zagreb to Switzerland on Wednesday carrying the weight of a wretched domestic run, while the Croatian champions arrive buoyed by ten games without defeat and a goal tally that speaks of genuine attacking intent.

Thun crest
Thun
UEFA Champions League
vs
00.00 Wednesday 22nd July 2026
Dinamo Zagreb crest
Dinamo Zagreb
The Connoisseur
Β· 5 min read
Updated
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There are fixtures in European football that arrive not as contests but as examinations. Thun versus Dinamo Zagreb, on a Wednesday evening in July, in the opening stages of the UEFA Champions League, is precisely that kind of match. One side comes to it riding a wave of confidence, their football fluid and productive, their defensive record in recent weeks impressively composed. The other arrives carrying the burden of form so poor it is difficult to look at directly. What makes the occasion compelling, of course, is that football has a wonderful habit of ignoring what it is supposed to do.

A Summer in Switzerland to Forget

What people do not understand is how profoundly a run of poor results can erode the belief that good football requires. Thun have won just one of their last ten matches across all competitions, a sequence that reads as one win, one draw, and eight defeats. They have conceded twenty-two goals in that period while scoring only ten. Those numbers describe a side that has been opened up repeatedly, a team whose defensive shape has offered insufficient resistance at every level.

The home record offers a slightly more encouraging picture in isolation. In their last four home fixtures, Thun have won twice, scoring eleven goals in the process, though they have also conceded eleven in that same sample, and they have not kept a single clean sheet. There is clearly some capacity to create, some willingness to engage and attack, but the structural frailty behind the ball remains a serious concern. Three players are currently absent through injury, including one on a long-term basis whose expected return date has already passed, and another with no return date at all. A squad already navigating a crisis of confidence must also do so with a depleted group.

Arriving on the Champions League stage for the first time in recent memory is a moment that should be savoured by any club and its supporters. But Thun will need to find reserves of belief that their form has done very little to nurture. The occasion may yet lift them. Atmosphere and ambition can do remarkable things to a football team when the stadium is full and the European anthem fills the air. In my time, I played in matches where the occasion itself transformed what we were capable of. Whether Thun can access that version of themselves remains the central question.

Zagreb: A Side That Knows How to Win

Dinamo Zagreb carry themselves onto this pitch with the quiet assurance of a team that has been winning consistently and winning well. Over their last ten matches, they have collected eight victories alongside two draws, scoring an extraordinary thirty-two goals while conceding just six. That is not the record of a team that has been fortunate. That is the record of a side playing with intelligence, with collective clarity, and with genuine quality in the final third.

Their away form is, if anything, even more striking than their overall numbers suggest. In their last five matches on the road, Zagreb have won all five, scoring seventeen goals and conceding only three. There is a directness and confidence about how they carry their football into opposition territory, a sense that they do not shrink when the home crowd is against them. You cannot coach that kind of composure. It comes from winning, from the muscle memory of good results, from players who know what it feels like to impose themselves on a match.

The question of how they translate that Croatian domestic dominance to a European stage is a fair one, and it is a question that will be answered not tonight but over the course of this campaign. What we know from the evidence in front of us is that Zagreb are in the kind of form that makes any opponent uneasy, and that Thun, in their current state, are precisely the sort of side that a team riding this kind of momentum will fancy their chances against.

The Beauty and the Burden of the Big Stage

What makes this fixture interesting beyond the obvious imbalance is the nature of the occasion itself. The Champions League has a way of producing nights that confound expectation, where the smaller side finds something they did not know they possessed, where a single moment of quality or courage shifts everything that follows. I have seen it happen from the inside, and it never stops being extraordinary when it does.

Thun, playing at home, with their supporters behind them and the significance of the occasion charging the atmosphere, will not simply roll over. They have shown, in those home fixtures where they have scored freely, that there is attacking intent within this squad. The problem is that Zagreb's defence has been exceptionally difficult to breach in recent weeks, conceding fewer than one goal per game across their last ten matches, and their attacking players have demonstrated they can punish the kind of defensive uncertainties that Thun have been displaying.

The absence of injured players compounds Thun's difficulties. A side already short of the consistency that a European fixture demands must now ask more of those who remain. That is a weight that experienced squads can carry. For a group that has been losing regularly, it asks a great deal.

Reading the Match

If there is beauty to be found in this fixture, it will likely come from Zagreb. A team scoring at the rate they have been in recent weeks brings with it the possibility of moments that make you set down whatever you are holding and simply watch. Whether Thun can find enough of their own moments to make this a genuine contest is the theatrical question at the heart of the evening.

The beautiful game does not always reward the beautiful team. But on the evidence of what these two sides have produced in recent weeks, Zagreb arrive as the side with every reason for confidence, and Thun arrive as a side searching for something to believe in. It is, in its way, a compelling story. Football always is.

Rafa's Pick: Dinamo Zagreb to win. The quality and confidence they carry into this fixture is simply too substantial to overlook.

Related: Form: Thun Β· Form: Dinamo Zagreb Β· Head-to-head: Thun vs Dinamo Zagreb

Match data, form summaries, and head-to-head records are sourced from SportSignals’ proprietary AI analysis engine.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Dinamo Zagreb's recent form heading into this match?

Dinamo Zagreb have been in outstanding form, winning eight and drawing two of their last ten matches across all competitions. They have scored 32 goals and conceded just six in that period. Their away record is particularly impressive, with five wins from five away fixtures, scoring 17 goals and conceding only three.

How has Thun been performing ahead of this Champions League fixture?

Thun have endured a very difficult run of results, winning just one of their last ten matches while conceding 22 goals and scoring only ten. They have failed to keep a single clean sheet in recent weeks, and the situation is further complicated by three players currently unavailable through injury, including two on long-term absences.

Have Thun and Dinamo Zagreb met before?

There is no previous head-to-head record between the two clubs available for this fixture, making Wednesday's Champions League clash a first meeting between Thun and Dinamo Zagreb at this level.