Norwich City host Ipswich Town at Carrow Road on Saturday afternoon in the Championship, and it’s a game with plenty riding on it at both ends of the table. Norwich sit ninth and are still trying to force their way into the promotion conversation, while Ipswich arrive in third place with automatic promotion very much in their sights. That alone gives this East Anglian derby real weight. Win here and Ipswich protect their spot near the top; win for Norwich and the gap to the play-off places tightens again in a hurry.
There’s a bit of narrative bite here too. Ipswich beat Norwich 3-1 in the reverse fixture on 5 October 2025, so Philippe Clement’s side will be keen to answer that one in front of their own crowd. Norwich’s season has been a mixed bag, but they’ve kept themselves in touch thanks to patches of good form. Ipswich, meanwhile, have been one of the division’s strongest sides all season, and Kieran McKenna’s team arrive with momentum as well as better numbers. This is one of those derby games where league position matters, but pride matters just as much.
Norwich City Form & Analysis
Norwich come into this on the back of a useful 2-1 win away at Millwall on 6 April, a result that followed a 1-1 home draw with Portsmouth and a 1-0 away win at Charlton Athletic. That’s a decent little response after the 1-0 defeat at Southampton in mid-March, because it shows they didn’t let one bad result drag them under. Before that loss, they’d beaten Preston North End 2-0 and Sheffield United 2-1 at home. Three wins from their last six. Not bad at all.
The wider home picture is less flattering, though, and that’s the tension with Norwich. They’ve taken 26 points from 20 league matches at Carrow Road, with eight wins, two draws and ten defeats. They’ve scored 24 and conceded 24 at home, which tells you almost everything. They can score there, but they can also be got at. That’s why they’re down in 19th in the home table despite being a respectable ninth overall. One step forward, one step back. That’s been the story too often.
Still, there are some encouraging signs for Clement. Norwich have managed to put together a three-game unbeaten run since the Southampton defeat, and their attack has looked sharper in the last few outings. The 2-1 win at Millwall came with 2.14 xG, three big chances and five shots on target, which is the sort of output you want to see from a side trying to hurt a promotion contender. They’re not locking games down at the back, though. Norwich have conceded in each of their last two home matches and their season-long home record suggests they’ll struggle to keep Ipswich quiet for long.
Ipswich Town Form & Analysis
Ipswich arrive in better shape and with better credentials. Their 2-1 home win over Birmingham City on 6 April extended an unbeaten run that now stands at eight league matches, and they’ve done it without needing to be flawless. Before Birmingham, they drew 1-1 with Millwall at home, beat Sheffield Wednesday 2-0 away, shared a wild 3-3 draw at Stoke City, drew 1-1 with Leicester City and beat Hull City 1-0. That’s a proper promotion-team sequence. They haven’t been blown away by anyone for a while, and they keep picking up points even when the performance isn’t quite clean.
Away from home, Ipswich’s record is solid rather than spectacular: seven wins, five draws and six defeats, with 31 goals scored and 25 conceded. That’s the sort of away return that keeps you in the top three, because it says they’re reliable enough on the road without being dominant. They’re 11th in the away table, which sounds underwhelming until you remember how strong their overall season has been. The raw numbers are still good. 69 goals scored in the league, only 40 conceded. They can hurt teams, and they don’t often fold.
Their latest win over Birmingham was particularly tidy. Ipswich generated 1.89 xG, allowed only 0.46, and won the key moments even though the margin stayed narrow. That’s a decent sign before a derby away from home. Mind you, they’ve also been vulnerable enough on their travels to keep this from feeling like a banker. The 3-3 draw at Stoke is the obvious warning. If Norwich drag them into a game with tempo and transitions, Ipswich won’t get the same comfort they had against Birmingham.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other well, and recent meetings have had plenty going on. Ipswich’s 3-1 home win in October 2025 is the freshest reference point, and it’s the one Norwich will want to erase. Before that, Norwich beat Ipswich 1-0 at Carrow Road in April 2024, while the sides drew 2-2 in Ipswich in December 2023. That’s a decent spread of results, with no side fully dominating the fixture over the longer run.
One pattern does stand out, though. Ipswich have kept just one clean sheet in the past 20 derby meetings, which points towards both attacks having a decent say in these games. That fits the general tone of the rivalry. It’s often a bit open, a bit emotional, and not especially tidy. Don’t expect a chess match.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 10/11 here, and that price feels fair for a derby that has enough attacking quality on both sides to get there. Norwich have been scoring at home and leaking enough to keep games alive, while Ipswich’s away matches are rarely sterile. They’ve scored 31 times on the road this season, Norwich have scored 24 at home, and the numbers point to chances at both ends rather than a slog.
The 2-1 correct-score call fits that picture neatly. Norwich have enough about them to nick a goal, especially with Carrow Road behind them, but Ipswich look the more complete side and should create enough to win the game. A 2-1 or 1-2 sort of contest feels the likeliest route. If you want a small alternative, Both Teams to Score has a strong case too, especially with Ipswich’s recent habit of games opening up and Norwich’s home record offering little in the way of defensive comfort.