Drogheda United host St. Patrick’s Athletic in the Premier Division on Friday evening, 17 April 2026, with the table making the stakes plain enough. Drogheda sit 8th on 10 points after a sluggish opening spell, while St. Pat’s are up in 2nd on 20 and still looking like one of the teams most likely to chase the title race all the way. It’s a meeting that matters at both ends of the mood scale. One side needs lift-off. The other wants to keep the pressure on the leaders.
There’s a bit of history in the fixture too, and not the cosy kind if you’re a Drogheda fan. St. Patrick’s Athletic have had the better of this matchup for a while, including a 4-1 win in Dublin on 13 March and a 4-1 victory in the same league fixture last September. Drogheda will know they’ve got to be sharper than that, especially at home, where they’ve been competitive without ever really convincing. Can they finally turn effort into points? That’s the question.
Drogheda United Form & Analysis
Drogheda’s recent run has been a frustrating blend of promise and collapse. The 2-3 home defeat to Galway United on 6 April summed it up neatly: they scored early through Mark Doyle, got themselves into the game, and still couldn’t close it out. Before that came a pair of goalless draws, first at home to Bohemian FC and then against Shamrock Rovers, and both felt like missed chances rather than creditable shutouts. Go back a little further and you find the 2-2 draw away to Derry City, another game where they showed enough edge to score twice but still let points slip. The away defeat to St. Patrick’s Athletic on 13 March, a 4-1 hammering, was less encouraging again. This is a side that keeps finding goals in patches. It just hasn’t been able to stitch the performance together for 90 minutes.
Their home record tells a similar story. Drogheda have picked up just five points at their own ground, with one win, two draws and two losses, and they’ve scored five while conceding five there. That’s not disastrous, but it’s thin. They’re not getting blown away every week at home, yet they’re not turning matches into comfortable evenings either. The xG figures from the defeat to Galway give a little hope — 2.38 expected goals from 16 shots, eight on target and two big chances suggest they can create when they’re on the front foot — but the problem is what happens at the other end. Three goals conceded at home to Galway after already being exposed in the earlier reverse against St. Pat’s points to a defence that can be stretched. They’ve now gone eight league matches without a win. That’s a heavy burden, and it’s beginning to show.
There is some fight in them, though. The 0-0 draw against Bohemians and the 0-0 with Shamrock Rovers weren’t flukes. Drogheda can stay in games. They just haven’t had the killer touch often enough, and once a match turns open, they’re usually in trouble. At home, this one feels like a similar test. If they sit too deep, St. Pat’s will pinch territory. If they push out, they risk being cut open. That’s a rough spot to be in.
St. Patrick's Athletic Form & Analysis
St. Patrick’s Athletic arrive with far more momentum, even if their last result was a narrow stumble. The 0-1 home defeat to Shamrock Rovers on 10 April was a tight match decided by Jack Byrne’s early goal, and the xG split — 0.78 to 0.82 — suggests there wasn’t much between the teams. Before that, St. Pat’s were beaten 2-0 away to Dundalk, and that was a sobering one because it interrupted a decent run built on the 4-1 home win over Sligo Rovers and the 2-0 away success at Waterford. The 0-0 draw with Derry City was solid enough too. In other words, the loss to Shamrock Rovers shouldn’t be overplayed. They’re still one of the better sides in the division. Still, the clean sheets haven’t been coming regularly enough, and that’s where the door opens for a game like this.
Their league numbers are strong enough to back that up. St. Pat’s are 2nd with 20 points from six wins, two draws and three defeats, and they’ve scored 18 while conceding just nine overall. Away from home, they’ve been decent rather than dominant: 4th in the away table with seven points, two wins, one draw and two losses, plus five goals scored and six conceded. That away scoring record isn’t explosive, but it’s efficient enough. They don’t need many chances to hurt teams, and they’ve already shown they can manage matches on the road. The 2-0 win at Waterford was the cleanest example of that.
The worry for Stephen Kenny is that his side have been less secure at the back than the league position suggests. They’ve gone four games without a clean sheet overall, and that’s a little more open than a team sitting second would like. Even so, they’ve got the better balance of the two sides here. Drogheda’s home output is modest, but St. Pat’s travel with enough quality to force the pace. If they move the ball quickly and keep the match stretched, they should get chances. They’ve already done it once against this opponent this season. More than once, actually. That matters.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has leaned St. Patrick’s Athletic’s way for a while. The most recent meeting came on 13 March, when St. Pat’s ran out 4-1 winners at home, and the pattern before that is just as comfortable from their perspective: 1-0 away in August 2025, two 0-0 draws in the league during 2024 and 2025, and another 4-1 win at home in September 2024. Drogheda haven’t managed a win in the last ten meetings, and that sort of run tends to stick in the memory.
There’s also a slight tactical tone to the history. Several of these games have been tight and cagey, but when St. Pat’s get on top, they’ve been able to make it count. Drogheda’s only real positive in the recent sequence is that they’ve kept a few games close. Fine. But close doesn’t pay the bills here. They need points, not polite resistance.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 5/4 for this one. It’s a fair price for a match that should have enough life in it, even if the head-to-head history has thrown up a few low-scoring meetings. The key point is that both teams come in with a clear route to goals. Drogheda have scored in enough recent games to suggest they won’t just sit in and absorb pressure, while St. Patrick’s Athletic have the quality to punish a defence that’s already been breached 14 times in the league overall.
The 1-2 scoreline fits the picture best. Drogheda’s home record is too patchy to trust for a result pick, but they’ve still created chances and scored in the right sort of games. St. Pat’s, for all their superiority, have been conceding too. That opens the door for a match where both sides can land, but the visitors’ sharper edge tips it their way. If you wanted a slightly safer angle, St. Patrick’s Athletic in the draw no bet conversation would make sense, but Over 2.5 Goals is the cleaner call.