Woking host Morecambe in the National League on Saturday evening, 11 April 2026, with both sides carrying very different burdens into the run-in. Woking sit 11th on 56 points, safely away from the worst of the scrap but still close enough to the pack above to wonder what a strong finish might do. Morecambe, by contrast, are down in 22nd with 38 points and can’t afford many more wasted weekends if they want to pull clear of trouble.
That gap in the table doesn’t tell the whole story, though. Woking have drawn too many games to turn themselves into a genuine force, while Morecambe’s season has been a mess at the back even if they’ve kept finding goals. There’s plenty on the line for both clubs. Woking need a win to stop the drift and keep some life in their late push. Morecambe need points, pure and simple. A decent result away from home would do more than ease nerves. It could change the mood around the place.
The home side also have a touch of recent stubbornness about them. They’re three unbeaten, even if that run is built mostly on draws, and Jermain Defoe’s team have become awkward to beat without quite looking ruthless enough to kill games off. Morecambe arrive with the opposite problem: they’ve scored plenty in patches, but the defending has been far too loose, and that’s why they’re stuck where they are.
Woking Form & Analysis
Woking’s last six tell a familiar story. They started with a 3-2 home win over Aldershot Town on 21 March, a lively game that had a bit of everything and gave Jermain Defoe’s side a lift. After that came a 1-1 draw at Southend United, then the narrow 1-0 defeat at York City on 28 March that stalled them. Since then it’s been all draws, but not dull ones. Altrincham came to Woking and left with a 1-1 draw, Eastleigh finished level at 3-3 in a breathless home contest, and then Woking went to Braintree Town and came away with a 0-0. That’s five without a win. Not ideal. Yet they’ve also gone three unbeaten, so this isn’t a team in freefall.
What stands out is that Woking rarely get blown away. They’ve scored in five of their last six and, at home, they’ve been involved in plenty of goals. Their home record reads six wins, nine draws and five defeats, with 32 scored and 24 conceded. That’s a decent base, even if it screams “mid-table” rather than “promotion charge”. They’re difficult to shut out at their own ground, but they also haven’t turned home advantage into enough wins. Nine draws at home is a lot. Too many, really. The flip side is they’re usually in the game.
There’s a slight tension in their numbers that makes them interesting for a goals market. Their overall record is balanced almost to the point of symmetry — 14 wins, 14 draws, 14 losses — and their goal difference of +9 suggests they’ve been competitive without being dominant. The recent xG from the Braintree stalemate was 1.45, and they created 13 shots with five on target. They weren’t miles off. If they can keep producing that level of chance volume, they’ll usually find a way to trouble Morecambe. The concern is whether they can turn territory into something cleaner than another tight draw.
Morecambe Form & Analysis
Morecambe are never far from a game that opens up. Their last six have been noisy. They drew 1-1 at home to Braintree Town on 14 March, then went to Yeovil Town and lost 3-2 in another match where both sides were trading punches. A 2-3 home defeat to Hartlepool United followed, which is the sort of result that really hurts when you’re chasing safety. They then lost 0-2 to Aldershot Town at home, before springing a surprise at Rochdale with a 4-2 away win on 3 April. Last time out, they drew 2-2 with Carlisle United at home on 6 April. That’s a chaotic run. One win, one draw and four defeats from the last six is not enough, but the scores are rarely boring.
Their away form is the clearest reason this game should be open. Morecambe’s road record stands at five wins, five draws and 11 defeats, with 36 scored and 47 conceded. That’s not the sort of away record that frightens anyone, but it does show they can score on their travels. They’ve hit 36 away goals already, which is a serious total for a side sitting in the bottom quarter of the table. The problem is obvious enough: they’ve also conceded 47 away from home, and that’s before you factor in how fragile they’ve looked even on decent days.
The Carlisle draw summed up the issue neatly. Morecambe scored twice but still left open the door at the other end, and their xG of 0.79 was much less convincing than Carlisle’s 2.27. They were living dangerously. That won’t be enough here if Woking start quickly. Still, Jim Bentley’s side have shown they can find a route to goal away from home, and that’s why this fixture leans towards both teams contributing. They’ve gone six matches without a clean sheet, which says plenty. Even when they’re competitive, they’re usually giving something away.
Head-to-Head
There isn’t a long head-to-head archive to lean on here, but the one meeting in the database is already enough to add a small edge to Woking’s case. On 30 August 2025, Woking went to Morecambe and won 2-0 in the National League. That won’t decide Saturday on its own, of course, but it does hint that Woking have already found a way to handle this opponent.
Morecambe will be determined to put that right, especially at a time when they need results more than they need sentiment. Yet the pattern from that meeting fits the wider picture too. Woking were the more controlled side that day, and Morecambe were left chasing the game. If Saturday follows a similar shape, the away side will be forced into risk. That tends to leave gaps. Plenty of them, if Woking are sharp.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/7 here. It’s short enough for a reason. Woking have been involved in plenty of open games at home, Morecambe’s matches are regularly swinging between attack and error, and both sides come in with scoring threat but questionable defensive discipline. The clean-sheet numbers are a real clue: Morecambe haven’t kept one in six, while Woking’s home games have been productive without being tidy. That points straight towards goals.
A 2-1 Woking win looks the most natural scoreline. Woking should have enough control at home to edge it, but Morecambe’s ability to nick chances away from home means they’re not going quietly. If you wanted a slightly more aggressive angle, Both Teams to Score would have obvious appeal too. But the totals market feels safer. This one should have moments. Probably a few.