Newcastle United host Bournemouth on Saturday evening in a Premier League game that matters more than the table first suggests. Newcastle sit 14th on 42 points, Bournemouth are 11th on 45, and while neither side is staring at the bottom three right now, this is the kind of fixture that shapes the final mood of a season. Win it and the run-in looks manageable. Lose it and the noise grows.
There’s a different pressure on both benches too. Eddie Howe’s team have drifted badly in recent weeks, knocked out of Europe and out of the FA Cup, and now left trying to stop the domestic campaign from turning flat and sour. Bournemouth, under Andoni Iraola, arrive with a far healthier feel about them. They’re not blowing teams away every week, but they just don’t seem to lose. That counts for plenty in April.
Newcastle’s season has had big moments and ugly ones. The Champions League tie against Barcelona brought both. A 1-1 draw at St James’ Park gave them a foothold, then the return leg turned brutal in a 7-2 defeat. Since then, the league has become about damage limitation and finding a finish that doesn’t invite hard questions over the summer. Bournemouth are chasing something simpler but no less valuable: a strong top-half finish and another statement that Iraola’s side are awkward, durable and hard to put away.
Newcastle United Form & Analysis
Newcastle are in a bad spell. No point dressing it up. They’ve gone three games without a win and four defeats in their last six across all competitions tells its own story. The latest was a 2-1 loss at Crystal Palace on 12 April, a game they led through William Osula before folding late, with Jean-Philippe Mateta equalising on 80 minutes and then winning it with a stoppage-time penalty. That one will sting. Newcastle created some threat, but Palace finished with the stronger underlying numbers on the day too — 1.78 xG against Newcastle’s 1.14, more shots, more shots on target, more big chances. The collapse wasn’t a fluke.
Go back a little further and the pattern is messy. They lost 2-1 at home to Sunderland on 22 March, which is the kind of result supporters don’t forgive quickly. Before that came the Barcelona hammering away from home in Europe, 7-2, after drawing 1-1 with them at St James’. There was one proper bright spot in this run, mind you: a 1-0 win at Chelsea on 14 March. That result showed they can still be compact and nasty away to a better side when the structure holds. The problem is they haven’t sustained that level at all. The 3-1 FA Cup defeat at home to Manchester City was another reminder that once games open up, Newcastle can be picked apart.
At St James’ Park in the league, the record is decent without being intimidating: eight wins, two draws, six defeats, with 29 scored and 26 conceded. So they do score at home — almost two a game — but they rarely make life simple for themselves. That’s been the real issue. Newcastle have conceded in each of their last three matches, and one of the more telling trends around them is how often both teams get on the scoresheet. It’s happened in nine of their last 10. You can call that entertainment if you like. Howe will call it a lack of control.
There is attacking threat here, no question. Newcastle have scored 45 league goals overall, which is respectable enough for a side in 14th, and they were good enough to score twice across the two Barcelona games and nick one at Palace despite being second best for long periods. But the defensive record drags them down. Forty-seven conceded in 32 league matches is mid-table at best and, in this current run, they’ve looked fragile late in matches. That won’t reassure anyone ahead of a game against a Bournemouth side that stay in contests and punish loose moments.
Bournemouth Form & Analysis
Bournemouth come into this one with a very different feel around them. They won 2-1 at Arsenal last time out, away from home, as massive outsiders, and that result says plenty about their nerve. Eli Junior Kroupi put them ahead, Arsenal levelled through a Viktor Gyökeres penalty, and then Alex Scott nicked the winner with 16 minutes left. Bournemouth didn’t dominate the game — Arsenal had more shots and the better xG at 1.53 to 1.19 — but that’s almost the point. Iraola’s side stayed in it, absorbed pressure, and took their moment. They’ve become very good at that.
Before the Arsenal win came five straight draws in the league. A 2-2 at home to Manchester United had more life to it than the others, while away trips to Burnley and West Ham both ended 0-0. At home they drew 0-0 with Brentford and 1-1 with Sunderland. So the recent sequence isn’t flashy, but it is solid: one win and five draws in their last six, and they are now 13 games unbeaten in the league. That’s a serious run. Some teams rack up unbeaten streaks by living dangerously and escaping. Bournemouth’s version feels steadier than that. They don’t panic, and they don’t beat themselves too often.
Their away record in the league is useful rather than spectacular: four wins, seven draws and five defeats, with 25 scored and 32 conceded. Those concession numbers show they aren’t some ultra-secure road side. You can get chances against them. But they also carry a goal threat on their travels and, more importantly, they’ve proved they can take points in different kinds of matches. Open game? Fine. Scrappy one? Also fine. If you’re looking for why they sit above Newcastle despite only 10 wins all season, that’s it right there — Bournemouth turn losses into draws and draws into the occasional punchy away win.
The weakness? They do have a habit of letting games drift. Five consecutive draws before beating Arsenal tells you they don’t always have the cutting edge to finish teams off. Their overall record of 15 draws is the standout figure in their season. It’s both strength and limitation. Still, against a Newcastle side that have lost three straight and haven’t kept things tight enough, Bournemouth’s resilience looks like a major weapon. Can they keep it up on the road? On current evidence, yes, they can.
Head-to-Head
There’s enough recent history here to make Bournemouth feel confident. The sides drew 0-0 in the reverse league meeting in September, and Bournemouth won 4-1 at St James’ Park in this fixture in January 2025. Newcastle haven’t had many comfortable afternoons against them lately.
One trend stands out without overcomplicating it: Bournemouth have regularly found a way to avoid defeat in this matchup. That matters because it lines up neatly with the current form of both teams — one wobbling, one refusing to go away.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 1.80 is the standout play here. Bournemouth don’t need to win the match for this to land, and that cushion matters when you’re dealing with a side that have gone 13 league games unbeaten against one that have lost three on the spin. Newcastle’s recent matches keep swinging away from them, especially once the game becomes stretched.
The projected numbers point toward a tight contest rather than a home stroll, with both teams set around 1.30 xG. That fits the obvious scoreline call: 1-1. Newcastle should create enough at home to score, but Bournemouth’s ability to stay alive in games — and their recent away win at Arsenal proved that again — makes the visitors very hard to oppose in the result markets. If you want an alternative angle, both teams to score has a case as well, given Newcastle’s recent habit of scoring and conceding in the same breath.