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AFC Wimbledon host Stockport County at Plough Lane on Wednesday evening, 15 April 2026, with League One pressure sitting heavily on the home side and promotion-business pressure sitting on the visitors. Johnnie Jackson’s team are down in 20th and looking over their shoulder after a long run without a win. Stockport, under David Challinor, arrive in fifth and still chasing a strong finish, whether that means staying in the top six or pushing for something more.
There’s also a bit of recent history to chew on. These two met only a few weeks ago, on 28 March, when Stockport beat Wimbledon 3-0 at Edgeley Park. That result didn’t just earn three points. It was a reminder of the gap in form, confidence and attacking intent between the sides. Wimbledon need a response badly. Stockport, even after a poor afternoon in the EFL Trophy on Saturday, know this is the kind of fixture where a promotion contender should come away with something.
Wimbledon come into this one in a grim stretch. Their last six league games have brought five defeats and a draw, and the shape of that run tells the story. They lost 2-4 at home to Leyton Orient, then ground out a 1-1 draw with Peterborough United at Plough Lane. That was followed by back-to-back away defeats at Stockport and Lincoln City, both by a single goal, before Luton Town came to Wimbledon and left with a 3-0 win. The latest setback was a 1-0 loss at Burton Albion on 11 April. Seven games without a win. That’s the reality.
It’s not just the results that hurt them, it’s the lack of consistent threat. The Burton game was typical enough: Wimbledon managed only five shots, one on target, and didn’t force the issue often enough. They’ve now gone through a spell where scoring has become a chore, and when they do concede first, the game tends to drift away from them. That’s been a bad habit all season. You don’t survive long in a relegation scrap playing that way.
At home, the picture is a little better, but only a little. Wimbledon’s league record at Plough Lane stands at 8 wins, 4 draws and 8 defeats, with 24 scored and 22 conceded. So they’re not a complete push-over in front of their own crowd. They can tighten things up, and the goals against tally at home is respectable. Still, there’s no real cushion there. They’ve lost the edge that should come with home advantage, and the attack hasn’t done enough to turn tight matches into points. One win in this sort of spell would change the mood. At the moment, it’s all anxiety and very little momentum.
Stockport’s recent league form is much healthier, even if Saturday’s trip to Luton in the EFL Trophy ended in a 3-1 defeat. That cup loss shouldn’t distract from what they’ve done in the league. Before that, they drew 2-2 at Bolton Wanderers, beat Wycombe Wanderers 3-0 at home, hammered Wimbledon 3-0 away, drew 1-1 at Luton in the league and beat Northampton Town 2-1 at home. That’s a strong run. They’ve scored in almost every game, they’ve been lively going forward, and they’ve kept enough control to stay well inside the promotion mix.
The performance against Luton in the trophy showed they can still be opened up when the opposition play with real tempo. Stockport were 3-0 down before the hour mark, which tells you the game got away from them fast. That’s the one concern here: they’re not untouchable, and if they’re sloppy early, Wimbledon can make life awkward. But in the league, Stockport have been far more reliable than their hosts. They’ve had wins, draws and the odd setback, yet they keep finding goals. Nahki Wells has been among the scorers, and the side’s attacking confidence hasn’t gone missing.
Away from home, Stockport’s record is solid rather than spectacular: 7 wins, 6 draws and 7 losses, with 25 goals scored and 28 conceded. That’s a perfectly workable away profile for a side in fifth. They’re not shut-down specialists on the road, which matters here. They’ll usually give you chances if you can get at them. The flip side is that they’ll give themselves chances too, and that’s why they keep landing in open, score-friendly games. Their overall league position says promotion challenge. Their away numbers say you should expect both boxes to be tested. Can they keep it tidy at a ground where the home team need something? That’s the question.
Stockport have had the better of this fixture for a while, and the most recent meeting underlined that clearly. On 28 March, they beat Wimbledon 3-0 in League One, a result that was as comfortable as it sounds. Wimbledon struggled to compete across the pitch that day, and it’s no surprise that the previous meetings also lean Stockport’s way.
The broader run between the clubs points in the same direction. Stockport have won three of the last five meetings listed, with Wimbledon’s only win in that sequence coming back in January 2023. That sort of edge matters when the same side arrives with better form, better league position and more goals in the tank. Wimbledon haven’t found a convincing answer to Stockport lately. Not even close.
We are backing Both Teams To Score at 8/11 here. It’s a fair price for a game that should have chances at both ends, even if Stockport are the stronger side overall. Wimbledon’s home record is decent enough to suggest they can nick something on their own patch, while Stockport’s away figures show they’re rarely involved in clean-sheet road wins. That combination is exactly why BTTS stands out.
The 1-2 correct score fits the mood of the match. Stockport have more quality, more points and more attacking rhythm, but Wimbledon’s home scoring record and the pressure on them to respond mean they shouldn’t be written out completely. If the visitors score first, the game should open up. If Wimbledon get on the board, it becomes a much trickier night for the favourites. Either way, goals feel more likely than a cagey scrap.
An alternative angle would be Stockport in the match result market, but BTTS gives a better blend of price and protection. Wimbledon aren’t playing well enough to be trusted fully, yet they’ve got enough about them at home to ask a question. Not much more than that. Still, it should be enough for one goal.