Boston United host Truro City in the National League on Saturday evening, 11 April 2026, with both clubs still trying to settle their seasons before the run-in bites harder. For Boston, 15th place and 49 points give them a bit of breathing room, but they’re hardly cruising. Paul Hurst’s side have spent much of the campaign in the middle band of the table and still need points to keep any late wobble from becoming a real problem.
Truro arrive in a far tighter corner. They sit 24th with 31 points, stuck deep in the bottom places and needing every scrap they can get. John Askey’s team haven’t got much margin left for error, and away games have been a serious problem all season. That’s the blunt reality. They’ve only collected 10 points on the road, and the numbers away from home are ugly enough to worry any supporter making the trip.
This one has the feel of a game where Boston ought to carry the more natural attacking threat, while Truro will be hoping to nick something with organisation and grit. The recent meeting between the sides ended in a 3-0 Truro win back in August, which gives this fixture a little extra edge. Boston will want revenge for that. Truro would love a repeat.
Boston United Form & Analysis
Boston’s recent form is patchy rather than disastrous, which is probably the right way to describe a side sitting in mid-table but not pulling away from danger as comfortably as they’d like. They came through a tricky away trip to Brackley Town on 6 April with a 1-1 draw, and there was something useful in the way they fought back late on. Aidan Elliott-Wheeler levelled on 71 minutes, Lenell John-Lewis then converted a penalty seven minutes later, and Boston showed a bit of nerve to get something from the game.
That point came after a frustrating home defeat to York City, when they lost 1-0 on 3 April. Before that, they had played out a lively 2-2 draw at home to Altrincham, a match that hinted at both their attacking promise and their defensive looseness. Go a little further back and the picture stays familiar: a 6-2 defeat away to Carlisle United, a 2-1 home win over Yeovil Town, and a 1-0 loss at Rochdale. It’s a mixed bag, yes, but not random. Boston are open games. Goals tend to happen. Sometimes that works in their favour, sometimes it doesn’t.
At home, the story is still underwhelming. Boston’s record at their ground reads five wins, six draws and ten defeats, with 21 goals scored and 31 conceded. That’s not a fortress. Far from it. They’ve only managed one clean sheet in a long stretch, and they come into this one without a shutout in eight matches. That’s a habit they’ll want to break, but the defensive frailty has been there all year. At the same time, they do usually find a way to score. The attacking end isn’t the issue. The back door is.
Still, there are signs that Boston can make this a proper contest. Their home matches have had enough chance creation to keep them competitive, and their recent 2-2 with Altrincham and 2-1 win over Yeovil show they’re capable of getting on the front foot. They’re not a side that needs many openings. Give them half a sniff and they’ll usually take it. The problem is what happens at the other end. Too often, the reply comes too quickly.
Truro City Form & Analysis
Truro’s recent sequence has been all about narrow margins and missed opportunities. Their last outing, a 1-1 home draw with Forest Green Rovers on 6 April, summed them up neatly. They battled, they stayed in the game, and they got a point, but a red card for Abraham Kanu on 59 minutes made life harder than it needed to be. Tom Knowles put them ahead on 75 minutes, only for Forest Green to hit back late. That’s the sort of afternoon that leaves you wondering what might have been.
Before that, Truro lost 1-0 away to Yeovil Town, another one-goal game that slipped away from them. They had two draws on the bounce before that — 0-0 at home to Boreham Wood and 1-1 at home to Solihull Moors — and earlier in March they recorded a morale-boosting 3-0 win at Sutton United. That away victory stands out because it’s the one result that shows what Truro can be when things click: compact, direct, and clinical enough to punish mistakes. Mind you, it’s been the exception rather than the rule.
The broader away record is what really tells the story. Truro have won only twice on the road all season, drawing four and losing 15, with 14 goals scored and 42 conceded. That’s the sort of return that leaves a team marooned near the bottom. They don’t travel well, and they don’t score enough away from home to cover for it. You can see why. Fourteen away goals in a league campaign is desperately thin. Even by lower-table standards, that’s a struggle.
There is some resilience in this Truro side, though. They’ve drawn enough games to show they can hang around, and recent matches have been tight enough to suggest they won’t simply roll over. They’ve also kept things relatively contained in several of those fixtures, with the 0-0 against Boreham Wood and the 1-1 with Solihull both showing a willingness to dig in. The issue is that they often do just enough to stay alive, then fail to turn that into a result. You don’t get far on that diet.
Head-to-Head
There isn’t a deep pool of meetings between these clubs in the source data, but the one recent fixture does matter. Truro beat Boston 3-0 on 30 August 2025 in the National League, and that result will still be fresh enough in the memory to shape how both sides approach this one.
Boston will see this as a chance to put that defeat right on home turf. Truro, meanwhile, know they’ve already shown they can hurt Paul Hurst’s side. Still, one win doesn’t rewrite the wider picture. Boston are the more stable team overall, while Truro’s away record remains a glaring weakness. That previous result gives Truro belief, but it doesn’t change the basic balance of the contest.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 1/4 here. It’s a short price, sure, but it’s also a fair one. Boston’s home matches have been lively enough for goals to arrive regularly, and Truro’s away record is too fragile to trust for a low-scoring stalemate. With Boston scoring 21 and conceding 31 at home, and Truro giving up 42 on the road, this has the look of a game where both defences leave something behind.
The cleanest read is a 2-1 Boston win. That fits the shape of both teams. Boston have enough about them to score twice if they get on top early, while Truro are often good for a reply, especially when games drift into that scrappy, late-stage territory they’ve been living in for much of the spring. If you want a slightly bigger return, Boston United to win and both teams to score is the kind of angle that won’t surprise anyone, but Over 1.5 remains the steady play.