Partizan's attacking volume is the clearest betting lever here, and it frames three practical angles. The home side averages 221 shots on target across the season compared with Radnik's 140, so a straight result bet rests on coherent shot pressure translating to goals. Arguments for a Partizan win include the 67 goals scored this season and home advantage in the Championship Round; arguments against are that Partizan have conceded 45, so a narrow scoreline is possible rather than a rout. A majority of match previews back the home favourite but many still price a competitive score.
The goals and both-teams-to-score angle flows naturally from the numbers. Partizan scores prolifically but concedes at a similar clip to Radnik, who have 44 goals for and 43 against. The statistical balance points to open moments at both ends: Partizan creates more clear chances, while Radnik convert enough of their opportunities to avoid blanks. Counterarguments note both teams have 12 clean sheets apiece, which undercuts an automatic assumption of a high-scoring game. Roughly two thirds of tipsters expect goals at both ends rather than an emphatic shutout.
The third angle is a selective handicap for bigger returns. If Partizan sustain the expected shot dominance and press consistently, an Asian line such as FK Partizan: -1.5 pays for a two-goal margin that their superior attacking numbers make plausible. Against that is Radnik’s physical approach—90 yellow cards and four reds indicate they can disrupt rhythm and force low-scoring, scrappy matches. That makes the handicap riskier but gives attractive pricing.
Taken together, market signals favour a Partizan victory while the statistics keep BTTS firmly live; conservative bettors will prefer a Draw No Bet or single-match win, while speculative money will chase a larger winning margin if early pressure materialises. Expect a match where sustained pressure early determines whether the game opens into goals or becomes a tight, card-strewn battle.