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Peterborough United vs Port Vale Prediction & Betting Tips 16.04.2026

Football PredictionsLeague OneLeague One • England
Peterborough United logo
Peterborough United
16 Apr21:45R 36
00:00:00
Port Vale logo
Port Vale
PredictionStatisticsOddsLineupsStandingsH2H

Match form loads a moment after the page opens so the main prediction can appear first; recent results are fetched right after.

Peterborough United — Last 6 matches
Port Vale — Last 6 matches

Peterborough United welcome Port Vale to London Road on Thursday evening in League One, with both sides still carrying very different pressures into the run-in. Peterborough sit 16th on 51 points and are trying to put a poor spell behind them, while Port Vale are down in 23rd on 35 points and are scrapping for every point they can find to drag themselves clear of danger. There’s plenty at stake for both, just at opposite ends of the mood spectrum.

Peterborough’s season has been messy but not hopeless. Luke Williams’ side have scored 60 league goals, which tells you they’ve still got enough punch to trouble teams, but they’ve also leaked 58 at the other end. Port Vale’s numbers are starker. Jon Brady’s team have managed only 30 goals all season and have shipped 54, which is why they’re stuck in the bottom three and why every away trip feels like a small survival test. On paper, this is a game that should produce chances. On the table, it’s a game Port Vale simply can’t afford to let drift.

The recent meetings between these two also lean heavily one way. Peterborough have dominated this fixture for years, and they arrive with the sort of head-to-head edge that can quietly shape a contest before a ball is even kicked. That won’t win them the game on its own. But it does add to the sense that they’ll fancy their chances of creating enough in front of their own crowd.

Peterborough United Form & Analysis

Peterborough’s recent form has been a bit all over the place, and that’s putting it politely. They went to Leyton Orient on 14 March and lost 2-1, then were held to a 1-1 draw away at AFC Wimbledon. After that came the one proper lift: a crushing 5-0 home win over Rotherham United on 17 March. For a moment, it looked like they might kick on from there. They didn’t. A trip to Luton Town on 3 April ended in a 2-1 defeat, Cardiff City came to London Road on 6 April and left with a 1-1 draw, and then Blackpool beat Peterborough 3-1 away on 11 April. Four games without a win. That’s the reality.

The Blackpool match was a rough one. Peterborough were second-best in most of the important moments, giving up 15 shots and four big chances while only managing 0.97 xG themselves. Their own attacking numbers were not disastrous, but they weren’t sharp enough when it mattered. Dale Taylor scored twice, with Brandon Khela and Tom Bloxham also on target for Blackpool, and Fraser Horsfall’s red card late on only underlined how the evening had slipped away from Peterborough by then. They were open, and they were punished. Simple as that.

At home, though, they’ve still been a much harder side to handle. Their league record at London Road reads 8 wins, 4 draws and 7 defeats, with 36 goals scored and 23 conceded. That’s a proper scoring base. It also tells you why they can’t quite be trusted defensively, because even on their own patch they’ve been giving opponents enough of a look. The positive for neutral eyes — and for anyone looking at a goals market — is that Peterborough’s matches have rarely been cagey. They’ve scored 60 in the league, they’ve been involved in plenty of open games, and they’ve got a strong habit of both scoring and conceding. You’d back them to create. You wouldn’t back them to keep things clean.

There’s also a little rhythm in the numbers worth noting. Peterborough have been drawing enough to suggest they can stay in games, but they’ve also gone four without a win and four without a clean sheet. That’s not the sort of form that screams control. It screams volatility. And volatility usually brings goals.

Port Vale Form & Analysis

Port Vale come into this after a much-needed 0-0 draw at home to Barnsley on 14 April, a result that at least stopped the bleeding after a strange little run. Before that, they beat Rotherham United 1-0 at home on 7 April, then got absolutely thumped 7-0 away to Chelsea in the FA Cup on 4 April. That one was brutal, but it doesn’t really tell us much about League One survival football. The league results around it do. Away at Wycombe Wanderers on 28 March, Port Vale lost 4-0. They then fell 1-0 at Doncaster Rovers on 24 March before beating Bolton Wanderers 1-0 at home on 21 March. That’s not a side finding fluency. That’s a side lurching between scraps and setbacks.

The away record is a big part of the problem. Port Vale have taken just 15 points on the road all season, with 4 wins, 3 draws and 12 defeats. They’ve scored only 13 away league goals and conceded 31. Those are ugly away numbers. Really ugly. It means they’re not just losing matches away from home; they’re struggling to create enough to put pressure on opponents, and they’re leaving themselves far too exposed once the game opens up. That’s exactly the sort of profile that can get picked apart by a side like Peterborough, who are happier when the tempo is high and the spaces are there.

The Barnsley draw at least showed some resistance. Port Vale kept a clean sheet and limited the damage despite facing 18 shots, with Barnsley only getting one effort on target. There was also that missed penalty from Adam Phillips, which was a nice little escape route for Port Vale. Still, you can’t build too much on a goalless draw when your broader away story is one of very low output and regular punishment. Thirty league goals all season is the bluntest possible warning. They don’t score enough to take the pressure off themselves.

Mind you, Port Vale have been a little more stubborn of late than their overall position suggests. Their last two league games have brought a win and a draw, so they arrive with a small bit of confidence. But even that is fragile. One decent spell doesn’t erase a season of losses, especially away from home. Can they keep it tight for 90 minutes at London Road? That’s the question. History says no. The road record says no. The attacking record says no as well.

Head-to-Head

This fixture has been dominated by Peterborough for a long time, and the recent meetings are one-sided enough to matter. Peterborough beat Port Vale 1-0 at Vale Park in December 2025, and before that they won 3-0 at home in April 2024, 1-0 away in October 2023, 2-0 away in January 2023 and 3-0 at London Road in September 2022. You have to go back a long way to find Port Vale getting anything out of this contest.

There’s a clear pattern here. Peterborough have repeatedly found ways to beat Port Vale without much fuss, and Port Vale have struggled to lay a glove on them. That sort of history doesn’t guarantee anything on Thursday, but it does explain why the home side will feel confident about getting chances and why the away side will need a major lift to change the tone of the fixture.

We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals

We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/13 here, and it’s the clearest angle on the game. Peterborough’s home numbers point towards a lively contest, their recent matches have been open, and Port Vale’s away record is full of goals against. That’s a nasty combination for a totals line. There’s just too much space in this matchup for it to feel like a low-event draw.

The 2-1 correct score feels right as well. Peterborough should have the better of the chances, and the xG projection of 2.0 to 1.3 leans toward a match where both teams get on the board. Port Vale’s defensive record on the road says they’re likely to concede at least twice if Peterborough start quickly. Still, their recent ability to nick something from a game means they’re not ruled out of scoring one themselves. Over 2.5 Goals looks strong, and if you want a secondary angle, Peterborough to win and both teams to score has a bit of appeal too.