Stoke City welcome Blackburn Rovers to the bet365 Stadium on Saturday evening with both sides still trying to finish the Championship season on a decent note. Stoke are sitting 13th with 54 points, not far off the pack above them, while Blackburn are down in 19th on 47. There’s no promotion race drama here, no relegation panic either. What there is, though, is pride, momentum and the sort of late-season point-hunting that can shape how a campaign is remembered.
For Stoke, a home win would be another step towards a respectable top-half finish and a way to put some gloss on a stop-start run. Blackburn arrive with a different sort of pressure. Michael O’Neill’s side have steadied themselves a little, but they’re still below where they’d want to be and every trip away from home feels like an examination of nerve as much as ability. This one has enough on it to matter. Not season-defining, perhaps. But far from dead rubber territory.
The journey to this point has been all about patches and resets rather than smooth progress. Stoke’s recent results swing from flat to lively and back again. Blackburn have spent much of the spring trying to shut the game down and nick something. That tension should shape Saturday’s match. It’s not hard to imagine a contest that starts cautiously, opens up in spells, and lands somewhere around the two-goal mark.
Stoke City Form & Analysis
Stoke’s last six have told a familiar story: one good result, one poor one, then repeat. They beat Sheffield Wednesday 2-0 at home on 3 April, and that was a proper response after a 3-1 defeat at Preston North End on 20 March. Before that, they had drawn 3-3 with Ipswich Town at home, a wild game that said plenty about their attacking upside and their defensive looseness in the same breath. Then came the 3-1 home win over Watford on 14 March. Encouraging. Energetic. Not exactly watertight.
The latest outing was a step backwards. Stoke lost 2-0 away at Derby County on 6 April, and it wasn’t close in the way the scoreline suggests. Their xG was just 0.30, with only seven shots and none on target. Derby had 20 attempts, seven big chances and a 2.39 xG figure that painted a clear picture of control. That was a rough afternoon. The good news for Stoke is that they’ve usually been much more convincing at home, where the rhythm suits them better and they’ve had more success turning pressure into goals.
Their home record gives them a decent platform: nine wins, five draws and six defeats, with 31 scored and 21 conceded on their own ground. That’s a strong enough base for a side in 13th. They’ve been scoring at home at a better rate than Blackburn have away, and they’ve also shown a useful knack for striking first. Stoke have opened the scoring in four of their last five league games, and that matters here. If they get the first goal again, Blackburn will have to come out of their shell. That tends to create chances at both ends. It’s also the sort of pattern that can carry an Over 1.5 Goals angle without too much fuss.
There are weak spots, of course. Stoke don’t always control games once they’ve lost momentum, and their away form has dragged the overall numbers down. Yet at home, they’re generally harder to play against and more likely to land on the front foot. With Mark Robins’ side having scored 48 league goals overall and conceded 45, they’re neither dull nor especially robust. They sit somewhere in the middle, and that’s exactly why this kind of fixture can drift into a 2-1 shape.
Blackburn Rovers Form & Analysis
Blackburn’s recent run has been more about survival than spectacle. They started with a 0-0 draw at home to West Bromwich Albion on 6 April, a result that said a lot about where they are right now. It was organised and disciplined, but not exactly expansive. Their previous trip away, though, was more encouraging: a 1-0 win at Birmingham City on 3 April, a tidy away performance that showed they can still do just enough when the game is tight. Before that came another goalless draw, this time at home to Middlesbrough. Safe, narrow, fairly forgettable.
The result before that was a 2-1 win away at Millwall on 14 March, which remains their best recent away statement. That was followed by a 1-0 defeat at Oxford United and a 1-1 draw at home to Portsmouth. So Blackburn have been hard to beat in stretches, yet they haven’t exactly rattled in the goals. Their last six league matches have produced just five goals for them in total. That’s thin. Very thin. It’s the kind of scoring record that puts pressure on the defence every week, because one mistake can undo all the good work.
Still, their away record is solid enough for a mid-table-to-lower-mid-table side: eight wins, three draws and nine losses, with 19 scored and 24 conceded. The points total on the road, 27, is respectable, and there’s proof they can nick results outside Lancashire. The issue is consistency. Blackburn don’t create enough clear chances away from home to feel secure, and when they do take the lead, they often spend the rest of the match hanging on. That’s fine if the back line stays sharp. Less so if the game opens up.
There is one encouraging streak for O’Neill’s side: they’ve gone four matches unbeaten since their last defeat, and that should buy them a bit of confidence coming into Stoke. Mind you, three of those four were draws, and two finished 0-0. That tells you plenty about their current profile. They’re competitive, yes. But they’re also cautious, and cautious teams can get pinned back at places like Stoke if the home side starts quickly. Can they keep it tight again? Maybe. Can they do it for 90 minutes while still threatening at the other end? That’s the harder question.
Head-to-Head
Stoke have had the better of this fixture lately, even if it’s rarely been one-sided. The sides drew 1-1 at Blackburn in October 2025, but Stoke had won the previous meeting 1-0 at home in March 2025 and also took a 2-0 win away in November 2024. That’s a useful little run for the Potters, especially given how often this matchup has been decided by fine margins.
There’s a broader pattern too. Stoke have avoided defeat in their last three against Blackburn, and Blackburn have failed to keep a clean sheet in four straight meetings with them. That fits the general feeling around this fixture: it’s usually competitive, often a little tense, and not usually short of chances for Stoke to find a goal or two. That won’t scare Blackburn, but it should stop anyone expecting a flat, cagey grind from start to finish.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 4/11 here, and it looks a strong play for a match that should produce at least a couple of clear openings. Stoke’s home numbers are good enough to trust them to contribute, and Blackburn have been involved in plenty of tight, low-scoring games without shutting opponents out for long enough to make this feel risky. One goal from Stoke changes the whole tone. Then Blackburn have to respond. That’s usually when this line becomes very live.
A 2-1 Stoke win feels the likeliest scoreline. It fits the shape of both sides: Stoke with the slightly better home edge and more direct attacking punch, Blackburn with enough organisation to make it a contest but not enough firepower to control it for long. The xG projection leans that way too, with Stoke at 1.4 and Blackburn at 1.1. That’s not a banker for a goal fest, but it’s comfortably enough to clear the 1.5 line.
If you want a livelier angle, Stoke to score first has some appeal as well. They’ve been doing that more often than not lately, and at home they’re usually the side more likely to land the first punch.