Leicester City host Swansea City at the King Power Stadium on Saturday evening in the Championship, with both sides trying to give their season a cleaner finish than the league table suggests. Leicester sit 22nd with 41 points, a number that tells its own story after 41 games: this has been a frustrating campaign, full of too many draws and not enough control. Swansea are a bit higher in 15th on 54 points, but they’re hardly charging into the final straight with swagger. There’s still pride on the line, and in Leicester’s case there’s also the need to stop this slide from turning into something uglier.
For Gary Rowett’s side, a home match against a mid-table opponent is the sort of fixture they’ve got to use properly. They’ve been hard to beat in patches, but not ruthless enough. Swansea, under Vitor Matos, arrive with a more stable league position but a fragile away record and a defence that’s given up too much on the road. It’s one of those games where neither side can really afford to open up too wildly, and that tension matters. The draw has a very live feel to it.
Leicester City Form & Analysis
Leicester’s recent run has been a strange mix of promise and frustration. They went to Ipswich Town on 7 March and came away with a 1-1 draw, then beat Bristol City 2-0 at home three days later, only for that lift to disappear in a 1-3 home defeat to Queens Park Rangers. Since then, they’ve drifted through a goalless draw at Watford, another 2-2 home draw with Preston North End, and a 1-1 away draw at Sheffield Wednesday on 6 April. Three straight draws now. That’s not a disaster, but it’s not the kind of form that sends fear through anyone.
The Sheffield Wednesday match summed them up pretty well. Leicester were excellent in possession of the ball and racked up 24 shots, 12 of them on target, but only scored once and had to settle for a point after letting the game slip from their grasp. They finished with 2.53 xG and still didn’t win. That’s the issue in a nutshell. They can create. They just don’t kill teams off often enough, and when they do take the lead, the game still feels open.
At home, Leicester’s numbers are decent rather than convincing. They’ve taken 26 points from 20 matches at the King Power, with seven wins, five draws and eight defeats, scoring 28 and conceding 30. That’s a fairly ordinary return for a side trying to dictate home games. The encouraging bit is that they’ve been hard to put away in recent weeks, going three matches unbeaten overall, and there’s enough attacking threat in the team to expect chances again here. The problem is balance. If they push too high, they can be punished. If they sit off, they don’t always look like a side that trusts itself to squeeze out a result.
Still, Leicester’s home environment should help. They’re not dominant, but they’re generally capable of scoring, and the recent run suggests they’re less likely to fold than their league position implies. That won’t be enough for everyone. But for a Double Chance 1X angle, it matters a great deal.
Swansea City Form & Analysis
Swansea arrive with a more erratic story of their own. Their last six have included a 2-0 away win at Portsmouth and a 2-0 home win over Stoke City, which gave them a proper lift in mid-March. But then came a harsh 0-3 home loss to Coventry City, followed by a 2-0 defeat at Wrexham, before they scraped a wild 3-3 draw away at Sheffield United and another 2-2 home draw with Middlesbrough on 6 April. That’s a lot of goals, a lot of chaos, and not much control.
The Middlesbrough draw was especially messy. Swansea were second best for long spells, with only 0.63 xG compared with Boro’s 2.19, and they were outshot 29-12. They still found a way to get a point, which says something about their fight. It also says something about their defensive looseness. They’ve now gone five league matches without a clean sheet, and that’s a serious concern going into an away trip against a Leicester side that does have the capacity to pressure opponents.
The away record is the biggest red flag. Swansea have picked up just 18 points from 20 away matches, with five wins, three draws and 12 defeats, scoring 19 and conceding 30. That’s poor. Plain and simple. They’re conceding 1.5 goals per away game on average and scoring fewer than one a match on the road, which is not a healthy combination when you’re heading to a side that can still create plenty of volume at home. You can see the risk straight away: if they’re forced to defend deep, they’ll likely give Leicester territory and shots. If they chase the game, they may leave themselves too exposed.
There’s some attacking life in them, though. They’ve scored in their last two matches and have enough craft to nick a goal if Leicester switch off. Žan Vipotnik has been involved from the spot, and Swansea have shown they can fight back when games turn wild. But this isn’t a team you trust on the road. Not really. They’ve been too porous, and when they face a side with Leicester’s home volume, that weakness tends to get exposed.
Head-to-Head
Leicester have had the better of this fixture for a long time, and the recent meetings lean in the same direction. Earlier this season, they went to Swansea and won 3-1 on 4 October 2025. That result fit the broader pattern nicely: Leicester have been the sharper side in this matchup, and Swansea have often been left chasing shadows once the game opens up.
The scoring pattern is just as telling. These meetings usually bring goals, and both teams have found the net in a good number of the recent clashes. Leicester have also been the side more likely to strike first and take control. That won’t guarantee anything on Saturday, of course, but it does explain why Swansea’s away fragility feels so dangerous here.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 4/11 for this one. Leicester aren’t reliable enough to scream confidence, but they’ve gone three matches unbeaten and their home numbers are better than Swansea’s away record by some distance. That’s the key. Swansea have only five away wins all season and have conceded 30 on their travels. Against a Leicester side that can still put teams under real pressure, that’s a rough setup.
The 1-1 correct score feels right too. Leicester should have enough possession and enough chances to avoid defeat, but Swansea have found ways to score in awkward games and won’t go quietly. If you wanted a slightly more aggressive angle, Both Teams to Score also has a case, though the safer play is to stick with Leicester avoiding defeat and let the draw do some of the work.