Plymouth Argyle host Exeter City at Home Park on Saturday afternoon in League One, and it’s one of those fixtures where the table still carries real bite. Plymouth sit seventh on 62 points, right in the thick of the play-off chase, while Exeter are down in 21st on 46 points and still looking over their shoulder. For Tom Cleverley’s side, this is about keeping promotion hopes alive and making sure a decent season doesn’t drift. For Matt Taylor’s team, it’s more basic than that: points are needed, fast, to keep the pressure from building any further.
There’s a local edge to it as well. These are two clubs who know each other well, and while Plymouth come into the game in a far stronger league position, that doesn’t make this an easy afternoon. Derby games have a habit of ignoring logic for long stretches. Still, Plymouth have the better squad balance, the better numbers across the season, and the more convincing attacking shape. Exeter have shown they can spring a surprise, but they’ve also spent far too much time conceding the first punch.
Plymouth’s recent run has been a bit of a rollercoaster, but the last few days have at least steadied things. They followed a home defeat to Bolton Wanderers with a sharp response away at Barnsley, winning 3-0 on 6 April, and that was the kind of statement performance supporters want at this stage of the season. Before that came a home win over Huddersfield Town, a narrow 1-0 against Stevenage, and a 2-2 draw at Reading. Stretch that back a touch further and you get the 3-0 success at Wigan Athletic. There’s a pattern there. When Plymouth click, they score in bursts.
Their home record, though, is more mixed than the league position might suggest. In 21 games at Home Park, Plymouth have won nine, drawn three and lost nine, scoring 29 and conceding 30. That’s not the home form of a side comfortably sitting in the play-off places, and it explains why they’ve had to work so hard away from home to stay in the hunt. At their best, they’re lively, direct and capable of creating plenty of chances — the 2.57 xG they posted at Barnsley and the five big chances they carved out showed that clearly. But there’s a flip side. They’ve been open at times, and a 29-30 home goal difference tells you they don’t always control games in front of their own fans.
That home vulnerability matters here. Plymouth do have a strong attacking habit, though. They’ve gone over 2.5 goals in six of their last seven, and that’s not some fluke spread across odd circumstances. It speaks to how games involving them often open up. One minute they’re pushing for a second goal, the next they’re inviting pressure at the other end. That won’t worry them too much if they’re scoring first, but it can turn messy fast if the game stays level.
Exeter’s form has been much less stable, even if the 3-0 home win over Doncaster Rovers on 6 April offered a welcome lift. Before that, they lost 1-0 at Blackpool, drew 0-0 with Leyton Orient, and went down 2-0 at Wigan Athletic. The sequence before that was even uglier: a 3-2 defeat at Luton Town and a 4-0 home loss to Cardiff City. That’s a pretty brutal six-game spell overall. One win, one draw and four defeats. Not good enough for a side trying to pull away from danger.
Away from home, Exeter’s numbers are bleak. They’ve won only four of 21 league trips, drawing four and losing 13, with 19 goals scored and 29 conceded. That’s the record of a team that often arrives on the back foot and stays there. The problem isn’t just results, either. It’s the way they’ve been forced into reactive football on the road. Too many away matches have started badly, and once they’re chasing, their margin for error disappears. Exeter have also been first to concede in eight of their last ten, which is a nasty habit to carry into a derby at a ground where the home side can score in a hurry.
Mind you, they’re not completely toothless. Exeter did score three against Doncaster, and Jayden Wareham was on the mark twice, while Josh Magennis added the other. That said, the underlying picture from that match was less convincing than the scoreline suggested. Doncaster had more shots, more shots on target and the better of the chances, and Exeter were far from watertight. They’ve actually been hanging on too often. Can they keep doing that away to a Plymouth side who’ve been finding the net regularly? Probably not for long.
The away record tells its own story. Exeter have spent much of the campaign in trouble on the road because they don’t just concede goals — they often concede rhythm. Their away goals tally of 19 in 21 games is modest, and with only four clean sheets away from home all season, they’re rarely able to turn a game into the sort of tight, awkward scrap that helps underdogs survive. When they do score, they still tend to look vulnerable. That’s a rough combination at Home Park.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has produced its fair share of swingy scorelines over the years, and there’s no shortage of emotion attached to it. The most recent meeting came on 23 October 2025, when Exeter beat Plymouth 2-0 at St James Park. That result will still sit in Plymouth’s mind. Before that, Plymouth had won 1-0 away in April 2023 and smashed Exeter 4-2 at home in October 2022, so the rivalry has very rarely settled into a neat pattern.
Go back a bit further and the goals can get wild. Plymouth won 7-5 in the Football League Trophy in 2017, while Exeter won 4-0 in League Two in 2019. In other words, this has often been a game with pace, emotion and, more often than not, goals. Both camps will know that form can be thrown out of the window in a derby. The difference here is that Plymouth arrive with the stronger attacking base and Exeter come in with a defensive record that looks far more fragile.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/7 for this one. It’s short enough for a reason. Plymouth have gone over that line in six of their last seven, Exeter’s away matches have lacked control, and both clubs come into the derby with enough attacking threat to make this a lively afternoon. Even Plymouth’s 3-0 win at Barnsley and Exeter’s 3-0 win over Doncaster point towards games that can open up quickly when one side gets on top.
The scoreline call is 2-1 to Plymouth. That fits the shape of the game best: the hosts have the stronger overall record, the better home attack, and enough momentum after Barnsley to believe they’ll create plenty again. Exeter’s best route is to nick the first goal and turn it scrappy, but Plymouth’s attacking volume should tell in the end. If you want a slightly safer angle, Plymouth to win and over 1.5 goals would also appeal, though the total-goals market is the cleaner play here.