Falkirk’s return to the Scottish Premiership has given this trip to the Forth a bit of edge. On Sunday afternoon, John McGlynn’s side host Rangers at the Falkirk Stadium with the home club sitting sixth on 46 points, right in the middle of a tight fight for respectability and a strong finish. Rangers, meanwhile, arrive third on 66 points and still chasing every scrap of momentum they can find as the season drifts into its decisive phase.
For Falkirk, this is the kind of fixture that tells you plenty about where they’re really at. They’ve already shown they can live with top-half opposition, but they’re also still giving up chances too easily. Rangers don’t need much encouragement. Danny Röhl’s side are chasing victories to keep pressure on the teams above them, and a trip to a promoted side with a decent home record is the sort of game they’ll expect to win. They won’t want any slip-ups here. Not with the table as it is.
The background to this one is quite different for each club, too. Falkirk’s season has been about proving they belong, and a home meeting with Rangers is the sort of occasion that can sharpen that narrative. Rangers, by contrast, are operating under the usual standard of expectation: trophies, top-three pressure, and no excuses in matches like this. They’ve been hard to beat for months, and that alone makes this a stern test for Falkirk.
Falkirk FC Form & Analysis
Falkirk come into this on the back of a lively away win at Motherwell, a 3-2 result that perfectly summed up their recent mood. They started quickly, scored early through Barney Stewart, and then kept finding answers whenever the game threatened to turn. Elliot Watt and Ben Broggio got them moving before Calvin Miller added a penalty, and they dug in late on after Motherwell refused to go quietly. That was a proper away performance. Energy, courage, a bit of edge. The sort of result that gives a dressing room a lift.
Before that, though, there was a reminder that Falkirk still have plenty to clean up. They lost 2-1 at home to St. Mirren, drew 1-1 away at Aberdeen, and beat Dundee United 2-1 in the Scottish Cup. There’s been some good football in there, but it’s not the cleanest run. Go back a little further and you find another strong home showing, the 5-1 win over Kilmarnock, which was loud and ruthless. Then came the 1-0 defeat at Heart of Midlothian. So the pattern is clear enough: Falkirk can score, they can make games messy, and they’re not short of belief. But they’re also conceding in too many matches to feel safe.
Their home record tells a fairly neat story. Six wins, five draws and five defeats at Falkirk Stadium, with 26 goals scored and 20 conceded. That’s decent, not dominant. They’ve made life awkward for visitors, and the goal return is healthy enough, but they’re not shutting teams out. In fact, they’ve gone seven matches without a clean sheet, which is a problem when Rangers come calling. The flip side is that Falkirk do keep finding the net. They’ve scored in every one of their last five league matches, and the market for both teams to score has been a theme in their season for good reason. That won’t sit comfortably against a side of Rangers’ quality, but it does tell you they’re unlikely to go meekly.
There’s a bit of swagger in Falkirk’s home play, though it comes with risk. They’ve scored 42 league goals overall and conceded 42, which pretty much captures the whole package. Open, lively, vulnerable. If they can push Rangers back early, they’ll fancy getting something from the game. If they start second-best, the defensive gaps can open up fast.
Rangers Form & Analysis
Rangers arrive in good shape, even if perfection is still a long way off. Their latest outing was a 4-2 home win over Dundee United, and it was a convincing one, at least in attacking terms. They produced 3.89 xG, registered 21 shots and put ten on target. That’s serious output. Ryan Don Naderi, Dujon Sterling, Amar Fatah, Thelo Aasgaard, Zachary Sapsford and Bojan Miovski all found ways to influence the game. When Rangers get that many bodies into attacking zones, they can overwhelm teams quickly.
That result was part of a strong stretch. They beat Aberdeen 4-1 at home before edging St. Mirren 1-0 away, and prior to that they drew 0-0 with Celtic in the Scottish Cup and 2-2 with Celtic in the league. There’s been a slight mixture in the bigger fixtures, but they’ve kept themselves difficult to beat for a long time. Their run now stands at eleven matches unbeaten, and that matters. It means they’re not just winning on a good day; they’re carrying form into nearly every match they play.
The away record is especially strong. Rangers are second in the league table for away form, with seven wins, seven draws and only one defeat. They’ve scored 24 away goals and conceded 12, which is a pretty tidy return for any side on the road. That one loss came at Heart of Midlothian back in December, and since then they’ve handled away work with discipline. They don’t need to blitz every opponent. They’re comfortable controlling the game, limiting danger, and then striking when gaps appear. That’s exactly the sort of profile that usually travels well to places like Falkirk.
Rangers’ wider season has still left room for frustration, because 12 draws from 32 league games means they’ve dropped points more often than they’d like. But the hard edge is there, and so is the firepower. Sixty goals in the league is a strong return. Twenty-eight conceded is even better. This isn’t a side leaking chances for fun. They’ve got balance, and on paper at least, that’s a bad sign for Falkirk.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings lean in Rangers’ favour, though not by a huge margin in the very latest league fixtures. The sides drew 0-0 at Ibrox on 30 November 2025 and 1-1 at Falkirk on 5 October 2025, so Falkirk have already shown they can frustrate this opponent. That said, Rangers have the stronger long-term edge in the match-up and have generally looked the more imposing side across the fuller history.
One stat stands out. Rangers have not lost any of the last four meetings listed here, and they’ve been the first team to score in five of the last six. That’s the kind of detail Falkirk will be desperate to disrupt. If Rangers score first again, they’ll immediately take control of the emotional side of the contest.
We Predict: Away Win
We’re backing Rangers to win at 8/11 here. It’s not a fancy pick, just the most sensible one. Rangers are unbeaten in eleven, they’ve got the second-best away record in the division, and they arrive off the back of a very convincing 4-2 win over Dundee United. Falkirk have done enough at home to suggest this won’t be a stroll, but they’ve also gone seven league matches without a clean sheet. That’s the problem. Rangers will get chances.
A 1-2 away win feels the right scoreline. Falkirk should find a moment or two, especially with their home scoring record and the fact they’ve kept finding the net against decent opposition. Still, Rangers’ attacking depth and away control should tell in the end. If you want a livelier angle, Rangers to win and both teams to score has a fair shout, but the straight away win remains the cleanest play.