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Can Stockport’s possession game crack Lincoln’s league-best defensive numbers at Edgeley Park? Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
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Lyon are on a five-game winning streak and have a strong home record, but the absence of Tolisso and Brest's aerial strength (16.3 duels won/gm) makes a clean sheet unlikely.
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This aligns with Lyon's offensive output and Brest's ability to score from direct play, representing a likely outcome based on the teams' contrasting tactical identities.
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Stockport County vs Lincoln City Predictions and Best Bets
Stockport vs Lincoln — bet365 Market Snapshot
Swipe through key markets with illustrative probabilities and sample bet365 odds based on our match analysis.
Stockport’s high volume of possession and home field advantage makes them slight favorites over second-placed Lincoln in a very tight 1X2 market.
Implied data from current pricing suggests the 1-1 draw and narrow Stockport wins are the most statistically frequent outcomes at Edgeley Park.
Stockport’s matches involve both teams scoring 64% of the time, while Lincoln’s high-value shot locations keep their scoring threat high.
- Lincoln’s defensive platform has been elite: only 28 goals conceded in 29 matches (0.97 per game), a key reason they’re second on 38 points.
- Despite different styles, shot volume is almost identical: Stockport have 333 shots (11.89 per game) and Lincoln 343 (11.83), suggesting chances should arrive for both.
- Stockport’s matches have been more open: both teams scored in 18 of their 28 games (64%), compared with 13 of 29 for Lincoln (45%), shaping the likely game-state swings.
Technical Control: Pass Accuracy
Stockport prioritizes sustained possession and circulation, while Lincoln is more selective with their use of the ball.
With over 10,000 passes recorded this year, the home side relies on accurate recycling to build pressure.
Lincoln’s lower accuracy reflects a more direct style, often looking for quick entries into the final third.
Shot Quality: Efforts From Inside the Box
Both teams generate similar volume, but the location of their chances highlights different tactical philosophies.
Stockport is more inclined to test keepers from range, taking 36% of their efforts from outside the box.
Lincoln shows high discipline in chance creation, ensuring the vast majority of strikes come from high-value zones.
Edgeley Park gets a proper League One billing on Friday night as Stockport County welcome Lincoln City, with both sides chasing promotion. It’s fifth versus second, separated by three points and the kind of fine margins that tend to show up in the most annoying places: second balls, set-piece timing, and the one moment you switch off to complain about the cold.
The table context gives this one immediate bite. Stockport are on 35 points after 20 games, sitting six behind leaders Cardiff City. Lincoln are second with 38 points from 21 games, three behind Cardiff, so there’s genuine pressure on both teams to keep pace at the top end rather than simply “not lose”.
Recent history between these two suggests drama isn’t optional. Their most recent meeting, back in April, finished Stockport 3-2 Lincoln despite Stockport trailing 0-2 at half-time. And across the last six head-to-heads listed, Stockport have won three, drawn two, and lost one. Add in a Friday 22:00 kick-off and a listed temperature of 6° at Edgeley Park, and you’ve got the ingredients for something a bit spiky.
Team News and Likely Set-Ups
Stockport’s possible XI reads: Hinchliffe; Onyango, Hills, Pye; Fevrier, Bailey, Norwood, Osborn; Mothersille, Diamond; Wootton.
That selection points towards a back three with wing-backs, and it leans into control. Stockport’s broader numbers back up the idea of a team comfortable having the ball: 52% possession and 77% pass accuracy across the matches listed, with 10,330 total passes (368.93 per game). With Norwood and Osborn central, the balance looks set up for circulation and tempo-setting, while Mothersille and Diamond sit close enough to Wootton to keep attacks connected rather than leaving him wrestling centre-halves on his own.
Lincoln’s possible XI is: Wickens; Darikwa, Hamer, Bradley, Reach; Hackett, Bayliss, McGrandles, Moylan; Street, Draper.
That looks like a back four and a midfield four supporting a front two. It also hints at a side built to compete for territory and moments rather than dominate the ball: Lincoln’s listed possession is 42% with 70% pass accuracy and 8,957 total passes (308.86 per game). The shape, on paper, can give them clear lanes to press wide areas and then play forward quickly into Street and Draper, with Moylan and Hackett working off the flanks.
On an individual level, Stockport’s likely focal point is Wootton, who has eight League One goals and three assists, alongside Diamond (four goals, four assists) and Norwood (four goals, four assists). For Lincoln, Bradley’s three goals from centre-back stand out, with Hackett on four goals and Draper on three.
How the Match Could Be Played
If those shapes land as they appear, the first tactical question is simple: can Stockport turn their extra share of the ball into clean entries, or does Lincoln’s structure funnel them into predictable patterns?
Stockport’s back three plus wing-backs can create natural width in build-up and invite Lincoln’s wide midfielders to choose: jump to the wing-back and leave space inside, or hold shape and allow Stockport to advance. With Norwood’s passing volume and accuracy (80.2% listed), the temptation will be to play through central pockets and then release Fevrier or Bailey outside. That matters because Stockport take a high share of their shots from inside the box (64% inside, 36% outside), suggesting they want to work the ball into finishing zones rather than settle for pot-shots.
Lincoln, though, look equipped to make those central lanes awkward. A back four with a bank of four ahead of it can keep distances tight, and their defensive output across the listed games is strong: only 28 conceded in 29 matches overall (0.97 per game). That kind of record tends to come from protecting the most valuable areas first. If Lincoln can keep Stockport’s creators receiving with their backs to goal, then the game becomes about second phases: half-clearances, recycled attacks, and whether Stockport can sustain pressure without leaving themselves open.
That “open” part is important. Lincoln’s own attacking profile suggests they’ll happily trade possession for chances. They’ve scored 44 goals across 29 matches (1.52 per game) and their shot volume is basically level with Stockport’s: 343 total shots (11.83 per game) versus Stockport’s 333 (11.89 per game). So this isn’t a classic ‘one team has the ball, the other barely shoots’ story. It’s more like two sides arriving at similar shot volumes via different routes—Stockport through possession and territory, Lincoln through quicker, more direct spells.
Transitions could decide the mood. If Stockport push wing-backs high and Lincoln win it cleanly, the first forward pass into Street or Draper can turn Stockport’s three centre-backs around. The listed timing data also hints at how each side starts games: Stockport’s average first goal time is shown as 49’, while Lincoln’s is 34’. That doesn’t guarantee anything on the night, but it does suggest Lincoln have often found ways to strike earlier, which can change the entire script—especially away from home.
Set-pieces sit quietly in the background, waiting to be loud. Stockport average 5.18 corners per game (145 total), Lincoln 4.03 (117 total). And with a centre-back like Bradley contributing three league goals, Lincoln carry an obvious threat when the delivery is right. At the other end, Stockport’s repeated attacking volume—2,917 total attacks and 1,361 dangerous attacks—suggests they spend enough time in advanced areas to earn dead-ball chances, even if the final pass isn’t always perfect.
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The Numbers That Support the Story
The table says this is a top-end clash: Lincoln second on 38 points from 21 games; Stockport fifth on 35 points from 20. Cardiff lead on 41 points from 20 games, so neither side can afford to drift.
Stockport’s control indicators are strong: 52% possession and 77% pass accuracy, compared with Lincoln’s 42% and 70%. That supports a picture of Stockport trying to run the game through sustained spells, while Lincoln are more selective with the ball.
But the shot counts drag you back to the key question: does possession actually translate into a clear advantage here? The totals are almost identical—Stockport 333 shots (11.89 per game), Lincoln 343 (11.83 per game). The difference may be in shot locations: Lincoln take 72% of their shots inside the box, compared to Stockport’s 64%. That suggests Lincoln’s moments, when they arrive, might be closer to goal.
Defensively, Lincoln’s concession rate is the standout: 28 conceded across 29 matches (0.97 per game), while Stockport have conceded 36 in 28 (1.29 per game). That gap matters in a game where both teams can generate similar volumes—because if one side is consistently harder to score against, it changes how aggressive the other can be with numbers forward.
Goal-pattern indicators point to a match that can swing either way. Stockport have seen Over 2.5 goals in 15 of 28 (54%), while Lincoln have Over 2.5 in 14 of 29 (48%). Meanwhile, both teams scoring is much more common in Stockport’s matches (18 of 28, 64%) than Lincoln’s (13 of 29, 45%). Put together, it hints at Stockport being involved in more open games, while Lincoln have more often managed to keep one end quiet.
Recent results add texture rather than certainty. Stockport’s last six include away wins at Mansfield (2-1) and Doncaster Rovers (2-0), plus four draws across all competitions, including 0-0 with Cambridge Utd. Lincoln’s last six include a 2-1 win over Cardiff, a 3-1 win over Barnsley, and a 2-2 draw at Blackpool, alongside defeats to Huddersfield and Wycombe.
Key “Moments” to Watch
The first big moment might be psychological rather than tactical: who lands the first proper punch? Lincoln’s average first goal time is listed as 34’, Stockport’s 49’. If Lincoln can get their front two into the game early and make Stockport chase, it forces the home side’s wing-backs higher and earlier—exactly the sort of scenario that can open lanes for quick, direct counters.
Then there’s the rhythm battle in midfield. With Norwood and Osborn in Stockport’s likely central pairing, the home side can try to dictate tempo through passing and positioning. Lincoln’s midfield four—Hackett, Bayliss, McGrandles, Moylan—will likely be tasked with turning that rhythm messy: closing angles, slowing the ball’s speed, and making Stockport play a few more passes than they want in the final third. If Lincoln succeed, the game can become a series of mini-scraps rather than a flowing possession contest.
Set pieces could be the sneaky swing factor. Stockport’s corner volume is high, and Lincoln’s centre-back Bradley has three league goals. In a tight contest between second and fifth, the “boring” moments are often where the damage is done.
Finally, keep an eye on whether Stockport can turn territorial pressure into high-value shots. Lincoln’s shot profile leans heavily inside the box (72%), so if Stockport are forced into more efforts from range, it can quietly tilt the balance without looking dramatic.
What could go wrong with this read? Plenty. A single early goal can flip the game-state and make all the shape talk irrelevant, especially with recent head-to-heads showing momentum swings—like Stockport’s 3-2 win in April after trailing 0-2 at half-time. And with both sides producing similar shot volume across the season totals, the difference on the night could come down to finishing, a goalkeeper moment, or one clumsy clearance that lands at the wrong feet.
Best Bet for Stockport County vs Lincoln City
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Both Teams to Score (BTTS) – Yes
Friday night’s meeting at Edgeley Park brings together two of the most effective attacking units in the division, with fifth-place Stockport County trailing second-place Lincoln City by just three points. The competitive stakes of the promotion race, combined with the statistical profiles of both teams, point toward a match where goals are expected at both ends.
Stockport County has demonstrated significant offensive consistency this season, scoring 28 goals in their opening 20 league fixtures. Their approach relies on sustained pressure and territorial dominance, evidenced by an average of 52% possession and a total of 1,361 dangerous attacks. This volume of offensive activity frequently translates into goals, particularly at home, and they have seen both teams score in 64% of their matches this season. With Kyle Wootton leading the line with eight goals and three assists, the home side possesses the individual quality to break down a disciplined defensive unit.
Lincoln City arrives in excellent goal-scoring form, having found the net eight times in their last four league matches. Their recent 2-1 victory over league leaders Cardiff City serves as a testament to their ability to strike against the division’s best defenses. While the visitors average less possession than Stockport (42%), their efficiency in the final third is remarkable. They take 72% of their shots from inside the penalty area, suggesting they prioritize high-value chances. Furthermore, Lincoln has averaged 1.52 goals per game across all competitions this year, and historical head-to-head records—including a 3-2 result in their most recent meeting—highlight a fixture that rarely ends in a stalemate.
Given that Stockport has struggled to maintain clean sheets, conceding 36 goals in 28 matches, and Lincoln’s front line is operating with high confidence, the probability of both teams finding the net is exceptionally high.
What could go wrong
A primary risk to this selection is Lincoln City’s defensive record, which is among the best in the league with only 0.97 goals conceded per game. If the visitors manage to successfully absorb Stockport’s pressure and shut down key creators like Ollie Norwood, the game could descend into a tactical stalemate. Additionally, a single early goal followed by a “park the bus” strategy from either side could limit scoring opportunities in the latter stages.
Correct score lean: 2-1
This scoreline reflects the narrow margins typical of a clash between two top-five sides while acknowledging Stockport’s historical advantage at Edgeley Park. Stockport has won each of the last three meetings at home against Lincoln, and they enter this fixture looking for back-to-back league wins after a resilient 2-1 victory over Mansfield. Lincoln’s away form has been less consistent than their home displays, with no wins in their last five outings on the road. A 2-1 victory for the hosts aligns with their tendency to score twice while occasionally leaving gaps for a clinical Lincoln counter-attack to exploit.
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