Shrewsbury head into Friday’s League Two meeting having lost four of their last five and failed to score in three of those games, which is a poor profile for a home side expected to protect their own box. At Newport on 28 March they managed only 0.13 xG from three shots, and their home defeat to Crewe brought a 0-4 scoreline that underlined how fragile they have been when pressure builds.
Tranmere are hardly in better shape, but their away record is at least competitive enough to keep them in contention for a result. They have gone eight league matches without a win, yet their 0-0 draw at Fleetwood and their 2-1 defeat at Newport show they can stay around games rather than be swept aside, especially against a Shrewsbury side that have now gone seven matches without a clean sheet.
The numbers at home and away also lean toward Tranmere avoiding defeat rather than forcing the issue. Shrewsbury’s home record reads seven wins, five draws and eight losses, while Tranmere’s away record is five wins, four draws and ten losses, so the away side’s profile is not one of collapse on the road. The xG projection is tight at 1.1 to 0.8, which fits a draw or narrow away edge more than a confident home win.
There is some tension with the short scoreline expectation, because both sides have recent matches that finished low-scoring, but Tranmere’s broader resilience away from home still matters for a double chance angle. Shrewsbury have also conceded first in seven straight league games, a worrying habit when the market only needs Tranmere to stay unbeaten.
My prediction is Double Chance X2 at 8/13. Tranmere have gone eight league games without a win, but they have still avoided defeat in several of their more controlled away performances, including the draw at Fleetwood. Shrewsbury’s run of four losses in five, plus seven straight league matches without a clean sheet, leaves them vulnerable again. The head-to-head is mixed, but the current form and the tight xG edge for Tranmere’s side are enough to favour the away double chance.