Burton Albion host AFC Wimbledon at the Pirelli Stadium on Saturday evening in League One, with both clubs still trying to pull clear of the lower-middle clutter and finish the campaign with some comfort. Burton sit 19th on 48 points, Wimbledon 16th on 50, so this isn’t a glamorous meeting, but it matters. A lot. One decent run and either side can breathe easier; one bad result and the pressure hangs around for another week.
Burton are the more stable of the two right now, if not exactly flying. Gary Bowyer’s side have picked up enough results to keep themselves moving, and they’ve at least made a habit of staying in games. Wimbledon, under Johnnie Jackson, arrive in a far shakier state. They’ve lost six league matches on the spin and haven’t won since 11 March. That’s the sort of run that drains confidence fast. Saturday feels like a test of nerve as much as anything else.
There’s also a neat little historical edge here. Burton beat Wimbledon 1-0 at Plough Lane in October, and they’ve had the better of this fixture for a while. That won’t decide anything on its own. Still, when one team is more settled and the other is leaking goals for fun, you’d rather be in the Burton camp.
Burton Albion Form & Analysis
Burton’s recent form reads like a side trying to find a foothold rather than charging at the finish line. They drew 0-0 away at Mansfield Town on 6 April, and that was a proper point earned. Mansfield pressed, Burton stood firm, and the numbers point to a game they could easily have nicked. Before that came a 1-1 draw at home to Barnsley, which followed a narrow 1-0 defeat at Blackpool. Go back a little further and you find the better moments: a 2-1 home win over Bradford City, sandwiched between a 2-1 loss to Reading and a tidy 2-0 away win at Northampton Town. Not a wild sequence. Just enough to show they’re not folding.
At the Pirelli Stadium, Burton’s record has been serviceable rather than spectacular: eight wins, four draws and nine defeats, with 25 scored and 27 conceded. They’re not turning home games into shootouts, but they’re competitive enough. That balance matters here. They’ve scored in enough matches to suggest they can hurt a struggling defence, and they’ve generally avoided the kind of heavy collapse that turns a decent afternoon into damage limitation. Their league position doesn’t flatter them, but neither does it tell the full story of a side that’s been hard to beat in patches.
The recent data also hints at a Burton side that can create chances without always killing games off. At Mansfield they generated 1.88 xG and 11 shots, with three big chances. That’s strong enough. At the other end they were tidy too, allowing only 0.69 xGA. The issue is consistency, not ability. They’ve gone three league matches without a win now, but they’re also unbeaten in two since that Blackpool loss. That’s not a huge run, though it’s enough to suggest they’re still functioning. And against a Wimbledon side as loose as this, that functional edge could be enough.
AFC Wimbledon Form & Analysis
Wimbledon are in a much uglier place. The most recent example was brutal: a 3-0 home defeat to Luton Town on 6 April, and it wasn’t close. They managed only 0.38 xG, didn’t even hit the target once, and were out-shot 24-6. That’s not just a bad night. It’s a warning sign. The same story cropped up away at Lincoln City, where they lost 1-0, and before that at Stockport County, where they were beaten 3-0. Throw in the 1-1 draw with Peterborough United, the 4-2 home loss to Leyton Orient and the 1-0 defeat at Stevenage, and you’ve got a side that’s spent most of March and April getting pushed around.
Away from home, the picture is even bleaker. Wimbledon’s league record on the road is 12th overall, which sounds respectable until you look at the numbers beneath it: six wins, four draws and 11 defeats, with 25 scored and 40 conceded. Forty away goals shipped is a heavy burden. That’s the sort of figure that tells you exactly why they keep ending up on the wrong side of tight games. They can score away from home, sure, but they’re carrying far too much defensive baggage. The back line has been too easy to open up, and the recent sequence of results has only made that harder to ignore.
Their form line is now six league games without a win, and they’ve lost every one of their last six except the draw with Peterborough. That’s a grim spell, and it’s not just about results. Wimbledon have been conceding first too often, which puts them on the back foot before they’ve settled. When they do chase a game, things open up behind them. That’s exactly what happened against Luton, and Burton will have watched that with interest. If Wimbledon start slowly again, they’ll be in trouble. Plain and simple.
Head-to-Head
Burton have held the edge in this fixture for some time. The most recent meeting ended with a 1-0 Burton win at Wimbledon in October 2025, and that result fits a wider pattern of Burton finding a way to avoid defeat. They’ve gone nine straight meetings without losing to AFC Wimbledon, which is a serious little psychological marker going into this one.
The meetings haven’t usually been wild goal-fests either. Several of the recent clashes have been tight, but Burton’s knack for scoring first has often tilted things their way. Wimbledon, meanwhile, have struggled to keep Burton out. That’s been the recurring theme. Burton know how to make this matchup awkward for them.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 1/1 for this one. The price is fair, maybe even a touch generous given how often Wimbledon are letting games spiral. Burton aren’t exactly ruthless, but they’ve got enough about them at home to land a couple, and Wimbledon’s away record tells you there’s always a chance they’ll contribute at the other end — or at least leave gaps for Burton to exploit.
The recent numbers point in the same direction. Burton’s xG against Mansfield was healthy, Wimbledon were battered by Luton, and the visitors have conceded 40 away goals this season. That’s a lot of damage over 21 matches. Add in the fact that Burton’s home games have produced 52 goals across 21 league outings, and a 2-1 kind of afternoon feels about right. If this stays tight deep into the second half, that would be the only real threat to the over. But with Wimbledon’s defence in this sort of shape, it’s hard to trust a low-scoring script.
A 2-1 Burton win is the call. If you want a slightly safer route, Burton to score over 1.5 team goals also has appeal.