


Tynecastle is set for a tense showdown as Hearts and Rangers meet with plenty on the line. Which side can handle the pressure best?
Hearts welcome Rangers to Tynecastle in a Premiership meeting with real pressure attached for both sides. Momentum, confidence and the weight of recent results all add intrigue to a fixture that could swing the closing stages of the season.

Hearts arrive with encouraging momentum, and their recent derby success has clearly lifted the mood around the club. Across their last six matches they have taken 4 wins, 1 draw and 1 defeat, while their home record is even stronger with 5 wins and 1 draw in six at Tynecastle.
The numbers suggest a side that is comfortable controlling matches at home without needing them to become shootouts, with 66% of their home games staying under 3.5 goals. That suits a Tynecastle setting where intensity usually matters as much as open play, and it gives Hearts a platform to lean on their organization and confidence rather than chase a chaotic game.
This fixture has been competitive over time, with Rangers holding the slight edge in the recent record. The last six meetings have produced 3 Rangers wins, 2 Hearts wins and 1 draw, though the average total of 1.17 goals points to a tighter contest than the standings might suggest.
That low-scoring pattern matters again here, especially with 66% of head-to-head meetings staying under 3.5 goals. Hearts have usually kept this rivalry close at home, while Rangers’ better results in the matchup have often come in controlled, narrow games rather than open affairs.
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They also meet a Rangers side under pressure, which should sharpen Hearts’ edge in transitions and duels. If they reproduce the composure shown in recent home outings, they have the tools to make this a difficult night for the visitors.

Rangers come into the match with strong overall results on paper, but the mood around the camp is less convincing after a damaging defeat to Motherwell. Their away record remains steady, with 3 wins and 3 draws from six trips, yet the current noise around the club points to a side carrying more strain than their numbers alone suggest.
Their away matches have tended to produce goals, with an average of 2.0 scored on the road and 66% of those games going over 1.5 goals. That attacking output keeps them dangerous, but the recent talk around James Tavernier’s possible move and the wider pressure on Danny Rohl’s side may unsettle the balance that usually helps them on their travels.
Tynecastle is a demanding place to visit, and Rangers will need a sharper, more controlled performance than the one they produced against Motherwell. If the pressure starts to tell, their ability to turn possession into clear chances could become the key issue.