Peterborough United host Burton Albion at the Weston Homes Stadium on Sunday afternoon in League One, and it’s the kind of late-season meeting that can still carry a proper edge. Neither side is chasing the title or fighting at the top end, but both sit on 51 points and neither can afford to drift into a lazy finish. Peterborough are 17th, Burton 18th, and with the table as tight as it is, this is about pride, momentum and making sure the final few weeks don’t turn messy.
There’s a bit of contrast in how they’ve arrived here. Peterborough have spent large chunks of the spring throwing matches around rather than controlling them, while Burton have been more stubborn, harder to beat and a touch more functional. The first meeting of the season also gave Peterborough a narrow edge, with Luke Williams’ side winning 1-0 at Burton in October. That won’t mean much on Sunday if they defend like they did against Port Vale, though. Burton, under Gary Bowyer, come in with a little more steadiness and they’ve still got enough about them to make this awkward.
Peterborough United Form & Analysis
Peterborough’s recent run has been a strange mix of punch and fragility. They smashed Rotherham United 5-0 at home on 17 March, a result that looked like a reset button after a poor spell. Since then, though, they’ve won none of five. A 1-1 draw at AFC Wimbledon was followed by a 2-1 defeat at Luton Town, then another 1-1 draw against Cardiff City at home. That should have been enough to steady things. It wasn’t. Blackpool beat them 3-1 away on 11 April, and Port Vale came to Peterborough on 16 April and left with a 3-1 win of their own. That’s the story right there: they’re still capable of scoring, but the back line keeps giving opponents far too much encouragement.
That Port Vale defeat summed up the issue. Peterborough had 16 shots to Port Vale’s seven and still lost comfortably. They did create, and they did get bodies into good areas, but they were loose when it mattered and allowed Port Vale to convert chances far too easily. The result also extended a worrying run: Peterborough have now gone five without a win and five without a clean sheet. That’s not the sort of momentum you want when a stubborn Burton side is coming to town. There’s still plenty of attacking quality in this team, though. They’ve scored 61 league goals overall, which is solid enough, and their home output is much better than their league position suggests.
At the Weston Homes Stadium, Peterborough have taken 28 points from 20 matches, with eight wins, four draws and eight defeats. They’ve scored 37 goals at home and conceded 26, so the profile is pretty clear. They can make games lively. They can also make a mess of them. The positive for Luke Williams is that his side generally create more at home than many teams in this part of the table. The negative is that the same open style leaves them vulnerable. You don’t need to be a genius to see where the risk sits. They’ll likely get chances here. They’ll also likely give Burton some. That won’t fill their fans with confidence, but it does point towards a match with goals.
Burton Albion Form & Analysis
Burton arrive with a bit more trust in their structure, even if their numbers aren’t exactly eye-catching. Gary Bowyer’s side have been difficult to break down lately, and that matters. They beat AFC Wimbledon 1-0 at home on 11 April, which followed a goalless draw away at Mansfield Town and a 1-1 draw at home to Barnsley. Before that, they were edged out 1-0 by Blackpool away, but they’d already beaten Bradford City 2-1 at home. It’s a mixed run, sure, yet there’s a pattern underneath it: Burton are competing in games, staying around the point, and keeping opponents from running away with things. Three unbeaten now is tidy. It’s not glamorous, but it’s useful.
That clean sheet against Wimbledon was the standout. Burton limited them to very little and only needed one goal from Kyran Lofthouse to get the job done. The underlying numbers from that match were strong too, with Burton registering 2.46 expected goals and restricting Wimbledon to 0.28. In other words, that wasn’t a smash-and-grab. They controlled it. Still, away from home, Burton’s ceiling remains limited. They’ve taken 20 points from 21 trips, with only four away wins, eight draws and nine losses. They’ve scored just 20 away goals. That’s not a haul that suggests they’re about to overwhelm anyone on the road.
That said, they’re still awkward opponents. Burton have 46 league goals overall, so they’re not exactly a side that fills stadiums with dread, but they’ve often kept themselves in games by not gifting much away. Their away record — 20 scored and 29 conceded — points to matches that are usually tighter than Peterborough’s home games. Can they keep this one under control? That’s the real question. The answer probably depends on whether they can slow Peterborough’s tempo and avoid getting dragged into an end-to-end scrap. If they do, they’ve got a live chance of nicking something. If they don’t, they’ll spend long spells chasing shadows.
Head-to-Head
Peterborough have had the better of this fixture more often than not in recent years, even if Burton have made things awkward at times. The most recent meeting finished 1-0 to Peterborough at Burton in October 2025, and that followed a 2-2 draw at Burton on New Year’s Day in 2025. Burton also beat Peterborough 1-0 at London Road in December 2024, so there’s no simple dominance here. These games have a habit of swinging on small moments.
Look a little further back and the pattern tilts more clearly towards Peterborough. They won 3-1 at Burton in March 2024, thumped Burton 4-0 at home in November 2023, and won a wild one 5-2 away in March 2023. Burton can definitely land a punch, though. The fixture usually gives one side or the other a route into the game, and it rarely feels passive.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 8/15 looks the right call here. It’s a short price, but it’s a fair one. Peterborough have been a reliable BTTS side in their recent matches, they’ve gone five without a clean sheet, and their home record points to open games rather than cagey ones. Burton don’t score loads away from home, but they’ve been competitive and they’ve found enough moments to trouble sides at this level. Put simply, both defences look very capable of offering chances.
The scoreline feels like 2-1 to Peterborough. They’ve got the stronger home attacking record and they usually create enough in front of their own crowd to get on the board, but Burton’s recent steadiness and Peterborough’s habit of leaking goals stop this from feeling like a comfortable home win. If you want a slightly more aggressive angle, Peterborough and over 1.5 goals isn’t a bad shout either. Still, BTTS is the cleanest play.