Newport County host Harrogate Town at Rodney Parade on Saturday evening in a League Two meeting that carries far more weight than a casual glance at the table might suggest. These are the bottom two, separated by just a point, and both clubs are staring at the wrong end of the division with little room for error. Newport sit 22nd on 34 points, Harrogate 24th on 33, and while neither side is in immediate danger of dropping off a cliff, this is exactly the sort of fixture that can drag a season one way or the other.
There’s a little more at stake than just pride, too. Newport want to turn a disappointing campaign into something sturdier before the finish line, while Harrogate are chasing a late escape route from the relegation conversation. A win here doesn’t solve everything, but it changes the mood. It gives the dressing room something to cling to. Lose, and the pressure only grows.
The sides arrive with matching problems and a similar profile: too many defeats, not enough control, and defensive records that keep leaving the door open. Newport have conceded 72 league goals, Harrogate 64, and neither has built much of a safety net. That usually points towards a scrappy contest with chances at both ends, and the recent head-to-head history leans the same way.
Newport County Form & Analysis
Newport’s recent run has had all the hallmarks of a side stuck in a rut, with one good result immediately followed by a setback. They went to Barnet on 14 March and nicked a 2-1 win, only to slip back at home to Bromley a few days later in a 1-0 defeat. Then came a proper high point, a 1-0 home win over Shrewsbury Town on 28 March, the sort of result that should have settled nerves. It didn’t last. Crawley Town came to Rodney Parade on 3 April and left with a 2-0 victory, before Newport were beaten 3-1 away at Notts County on 6 April.
That latest defeat was a messy one. Newport were second-best for long spells, recording only four shots to Notts County’s 14 and just two on target. Their xG of 0.83 wasn’t terrible, but the bigger issue was that they never really got a grip of the game once it started to slip. They did have moments — they were level in big chances at 2-2 — but they couldn’t turn enough of them into pressure. Four goals conceded in Nottingham after the earlier home loss to Crawley tells its own story. This isn’t a side keeping opponents at arm’s length. Far from it.
At home, Newport’s numbers are shaky rather than catastrophic: four wins, four draws and 13 defeats, with 19 goals scored and 34 conceded at Rodney Parade. That kind of record explains exactly why they’re down in 22nd. They do have the ability to nick games, as Shrewsbury found out, but the margins are thin and the defensive baseline is too low. Newport are on a two-match winless run now, and the bigger pattern is even less comforting: they’ve lost five of their last six in league action. Christian Fuchs will want more bite, more control and, above all, more resistance when games start to tilt against them.
Harrogate Town Form & Analysis
Harrogate’s recent form has been just as erratic, though they’ve found a little more life on the road than Newport have at home. They beat Tranmere Rovers 3-0 away on 17 March, which looked like the kind of result that might spark a run. It didn’t. A 1-0 defeat at Oldham Athletic followed, then a home loss to Notts County by the same scoreline. On 3 April they went to Grimsby Town and delivered one of their better away displays of the season, winning 3-1, only to come home and lose 3-2 to Bristol Rovers on 6 April despite scoring twice and making the contest far more open than they’d have liked.
That Bristol Rovers game summed Harrogate up rather neatly. They weren’t short of effort or territory — 17 shots, which is a healthy total for a struggling side — and they even pushed xG to 1.14, close enough to Newport’s sort of attacking output. But they were flimsy when it mattered. Bristol Rovers managed three goals from a game that never felt fully settled, and Harrogate’s willingness to trade blows left them exposed. It’s been a familiar problem. They’re not easy to shut out at the right end of the pitch, yet they don’t have the defensive discipline to protect leads or manage momentum.
Still, there’s a reason Harrogate’s away record is better than Newport’s home return. Simon Weaver’s side have picked up five wins and six draws on their travels, with only ten defeats, and they’ve scored 20 away goals while conceding 28. That’s not glamorous stuff, but it is useful. They don’t fold on the road. They’ve already shown they can win at places like Grimsby and Tranmere, and that makes them a live threat here. The problem is consistency. One week they’re sharp and direct. The next, they’re loose and vulnerable. They come into this one having lost their last match, and they’ve now gone four games without a clean sheet. That won’t inspire confidence in either dugout.
Head-to-Head
Newport have had the upper hand in the most recent meetings, and that matters here. They beat Harrogate 3-0 away from home on 25 October 2025, having also won 3-0 at Rodney Parade in March 2025. Go back a little further and the picture gets more mixed, but Newport still own the stronger overall edge in the recent sequence, with wins such as the 4-1 away success in February 2024 and the 4-0 home victory back in January 2022.
The broader pattern is impossible to ignore. These games have tended to open up, and that’s exactly why both teams to score carries appeal here. Newport have often found ways through Harrogate, while Harrogate have usually found at least one route back into the contest when the sides meet. It hasn’t been a cagey rivalry. Quite the opposite.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/11 here, and it’s the strongest angle on the board. Newport’s home record is too leaky to trust, Harrogate have found goals away from home more often than their league position suggests, and both sides are arriving off matches in which they created enough to threaten but not enough to control. That’s the formula for one goal at each end.
The 1-1 correct score feels about right. Newport’s 1.3 xG projection to Harrogate’s 1.1 points to a fairly even game, and neither side has shown the sort of defensive steel needed to shut this down completely. Newport may shade the territory at Rodney Parade, but Harrogate’s away habit of turning up and competing keeps them in it. One alternative is over 2.5 goals, given the way recent meetings have tended to stretch, though BTTS still looks the cleaner pick.