Sheffield Wednesday welcome Charlton Athletic to Hillsborough on Saturday evening in the Championship, and the stakes are very different for each side. Wednesday are staring at the bottom of the table and need something, anything, to stop the rot. Charlton arrive in 18th, awkwardly clear of the danger zone but nowhere near comfortable. For Henrik Pedersen’s side, survival hopes have long since started to look like arithmetic rather than ambition. For Nathan Jones and Charlton, this is about killing off any lingering anxiety before it becomes a real problem.
The backdrop is stark. Wednesday are 24th with just one league win all season, a brutal return that has left them on 25 goals scored and 82 conceded. Charlton aren’t exactly flying, but 49 points is a very different conversation. They’ve won 12, drawn 13 and lost 17, and while that record isn’t pretty, it’s enough to keep them in a relatively safe middle zone. Saturday’s meeting brings together a home side desperate for a spark and an away side who’ll know that three points would be a clean way to remove any doubt.
There’s also a little bit of recent history here. Charlton won 2-1 when the sides met at their ground in October 2025, which will give them some confidence heading into this one. Wednesday, though, tend to make life awkward in this fixture, and the broader pattern between the teams has often been tight rather than wild. That matters here, because this is not a game where either side looks built to go mad in the final third.
Sheffield Wednesday Form & Analysis
Wednesday’s recent league form has been a miserable grind, even if the last couple of weeks have at least stopped the bleeding a little. They went to Coventry City on 11 April and came away with a 0-0 draw, which is a decent enough point on paper, but the match itself told a darker story. Coventry pumped 20 shots at them, Wednesday didn’t manage a single effort on target, and the expected-goals gap was huge. Before that came a 1-1 home draw with Leicester City on 6 April, then the 2-0 loss at Stoke City and the 3-1 defeat at Hull City. Add in home defeats to Ipswich Town and the draw with Watford, and you get the shape of this team very quickly. They compete in patches. Then they fade.
The home record is bleak. Wednesday have taken only six points at Hillsborough all season, with no wins, six draws and 15 defeats. They’ve scored 11 times there and conceded 42. That’s not a tough place for them to play in the positive sense — it’s just a difficult place for everyone, starting with themselves. The numbers are ugly enough on their own, but the manner of the losses matters too. They haven’t just been edged out; too often they’ve been exposed and outplayed. At home, they’ve had very little room for error because they don’t score enough to carry themselves through the bad spells.
Still, they’ve been slightly more stubborn lately. Two games unbeaten is something, even if that’s doing a lot of work for a side who’ve now gone 37 matches without a win. That kind of run warps everything. Confidence disappears. You start to play not to lose rather than to win. The one small positive for Wednesday is that they haven’t been collapsing in every outing; the last two games have at least shown a bit of resistance. But resistance isn’t enough on its own. Not when you’re this far gone. Not when you’re averaging barely more than a goal every other game at home. They’ll need a cleaner attacking performance than the one at Coventry, because Charlton won’t care much for sentiment.
Charlton Athletic Form & Analysis
Charlton’s recent spell has been patchy rather than disastrous, which is a useful place to be when you’re heading to one of the division’s most troubled grounds. Their latest outing was a 2-1 home defeat to Preston North End on 11 April. That was frustrating enough, because the numbers from the match were fairly even and Charlton did create chances, but they still ended up on the wrong side of it. Before that, they drew 1-1 away at Watford, lost 2-1 at home to Bristol City and then slipped to a 1-0 defeat against Norwich City. There was a draw at Oxford United and, in among the rough patch, a 1-0 win at Middlesbrough on 11 March that now feels a little distant.
The road record gives Charlton a more solid base than Wednesday can claim at home. They’ve picked up 21 points away from home, with four wins, nine draws and eight defeats, scoring 19 and conceding 28. That’s not elite away form, but it’s a respectable enough return in this division. More importantly, they don’t tend to go missing on their travels. Draws have been a regular feature, which says plenty about their balance. They’re usually in games. They rarely get blown away. And against a Wednesday side who have only just started to show the faintest signs of life, that kind of control should count for something.
Charlton’s issue is the same one that’s followed them for much of the campaign: they’re not especially ruthless. Five games without a win is the current run, and the Preston defeat extended a spell where they’ve been close without being decisive enough. Still, they’ve scored in four of their last five, and that matters here. Wednesday’s home defence has been far too generous all season, and even if Charlton aren’t a side packed with punch, they’ve got enough about them to create chances and take one or two. Nathan Jones will fancy that his team can impose themselves in spells, especially if Wednesday start slowly — which they often do.
The real question is whether Charlton can turn territory into a result. They don’t need to be thrilling. They just need to be more organised than the hosts and sharp enough when the moments come. That’s the job. And on current form, they’re better placed to do it than Wednesday are to stop them.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings lean Charlton’s way, but only just. Charlton won 2-1 in October 2025, and that result fits the general tone of this fixture: usually competitive, often tight, rarely a shootout. Before that, the sides had a stretch of lower-scoring games, including Wednesday wins in League One and a 0-0 draw at Charlton in 2021. This isn’t one of those rivalries where one club has permanently had the other’s number. It’s more awkward than that.
One pattern is hard to ignore. These games have often been short on goals. The broader head-to-head record has seen five of the last six finish with fewer than 2.5 goals, and that’s exactly the sort of trend that matters here. Wednesday may be desperate, but desperation doesn’t automatically bring quality. Charlton are away from home, but they’re not exactly built to tear teams apart. If anything, recent meetings point towards another tight, slightly nervous contest.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 10/11 looks the strongest play here. Wednesday are too fragile defensively to be trusted for a clean sheet, yet Charlton aren’t convincing enough away from home to assume they’ll control this from start to finish. That combination points straight at goals at both ends, even if the game itself doesn’t become especially open. The 1-1 correct score feels right too.
The key detail is simple: Charlton have scored in four of their last five, while Wednesday’s home defence has shipped 42 goals at Hillsborough. At the same time, Wednesday have at least found a couple of recent 1-1 type results and their xG projection of 0.9 suggests they’re not dead in the water in attack. Charlton’s 1.4 xG projection gives them the edge, but not by enough to make an away win feel secure. If you want a small alternative, Under 2.5 Goals has a proper case as well, given how often these sides have been involved in low-scoring matches.