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Can the Potters disrupt Ipswich’s promotion charge? Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
Read Rationale ▾
Ipswich dominate the attacking metrics with 15.3 shots per game and a superior goal tally. Given Stoke’s winless run in 10 of their last 11 matches and key defensive absences, the promotion-chasing visitors are well-placed to secure maximum points at the Bet365 Stadium.
Read Rationale ▾
Ipswich have kept three consecutive clean sheets against Stoke and won the reverse fixture 1-0. With Stoke struggling for goals and missing defensive cover, a disciplined 2-0 away win aligns with Ipswich’s superior quality and historical defensive solidity in this specific fixture.
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Stoke host Ipswich at the bet365 Stadium with pressure building at both ends of the table. Form, lineups, tactics and key battles inside.
Stoke City vs Ipswich Town — BetMGM Market Snapshot
Swipe through key markets with illustrative probabilities and sample BetMGM odds.
Ipswich’s higher goal tally and Stoke’s winless run in 10 of their last 11 matches justify the visitors’ short price.
Ipswich’s high shot volume of 15.3 per game suggests goals, but Stoke’s defensive struggle often leads to high-event matches.
Ipswich have kept three straight clean sheets against Stoke, making a win to nil scoreline a credible statistical possibility.
Stoke have recorded four red cards this season, highlighting a trend of poor discipline when under sustained tactical pressure.
- Ipswich carry the sharper edge: Kieran McKenna’s side have scored 61 Championship goals in 35 games and average 15.3 shots per match, which gives them a far bigger attacking pulse than most sides at this stage.
- Stoke’s recent slide is a real issue: Stoke have lost four of their last six matches in all competitions and are winless in 10 of their last 11, a run that has dragged the mood down despite decent control numbers.
- This fixture has been tight for Ipswich lately: Ipswich have kept three straight clean sheets against Stoke in the Championship and won the reverse meeting 1-0 in December, so there is clear unfinished business here.
Attacking Volume: Championship Shots per Game
A comparison of offensive activity highlights the gap in creativity between these two sides.
Ipswich lead the league with aggressive shooting numbers, resulting in 61 goals scored so far.
Stoke struggle to convert possession into shooting opportunities, averaging over four shots fewer than their opponents.
Territorial Control: Dangerous Attacks per Match
This metric identifies which team is more effective at penetrating the final third.
Their style focuses on central penetration and through balls, creating constant pressure on the opposition area.
Stoke manage a respectable volume of attacks, often using the right flank, but lack the clinical edge of the top four sides.
Match Preview
This is a big Tuesday night for both clubs, even if the pressure falls in very different directions. Stoke City head into this one at the bet365 Stadium sitting 15th on 47 points, playing for pride but badly needing a response after back-to-back league defeats.
Ipswich arrive in fourth on 64 points, still pushing to ignite their automatic promotion bid. A 1-1 draw with Leicester City last time out kept momentum alive without fully satisfying them, and that leaves this fixture feeling important rather than routine.
There is also something to settle. Ipswich edged the reverse game 1-0, and they have not conceded in the last three Championship meetings with Stoke. That gives this contest a sharp edge before the whistle even goes at 20:00.
Team News & Probable Lineups
Stoke City team news
Bosun Lawal is out with a hamstring muscle injury.
Junior Tchamadeu is out with a knee injury.
Ipswich Town team news
No absences are listed here, which points to a squad arriving with strong options across the pitch.
Probable Stoke City lineup
Simkin
Wilmot, Phillips, Gibson, Bocat
Nzonzi, Seko
Manhoef, Bae, Rak-Sakyi
Smit
Probable Ipswich Town lineup
Walton
Furlong, O’Shea, Kipré, Davis
Matusiwa, Neil
Egeli, Núñez, Clarke
Hirst
Stoke’s absences matter because they thin out the defensive side of the pitch. Losing Lawal and Tchamadeu takes away legs, aggression and cover, and that is not ideal against a side that attacks with speed and variety.
Ipswich look well set to field a balanced, dangerous XI. With Marcelino Núñez, Jack Clarke, Sindre Egeli and George Hirst in the likely side, there is enough craft and movement to stretch Stoke in several areas at once.
Tale of the Tape
| Metric | Stoke City | Ipswich Town |
|---|---|---|
| League position | 15th | 4th |
| Championship points | 47 | 64 |
| Championship goals scored | 39 | 61 |
| Shots per game | 11.0 | 15.3 |
| Possession | 52.4% | 56.1% |
| Pass success | 79.5% | 81.7% |
| Dangerous attacks per game | 40.3 | 48.84 |
| Clean sheets | 14 | 13 |
| Corners per game | 5.43 | 5.89 |
| Last six matches | W1 D1 L4 | W3 D1 L2 |
The table tells a clear story. Ipswich bring more goals, more shots, more possession and more dangerous attacks, which suggests they should carry the larger share of control and threat.
Stoke are not a passive side, though. They still post solid possession numbers and decent corner volume, so this should not be one-way traffic. The issue is whether they can turn that control into clean, decisive moments in the final third.
Tactical Battle
Ipswich should control the ball
This looks like a game Ipswich will try to own. They play possession football, use short passes, attack through the middle and control matches in the opposition half, and the numbers support that style with 56.1% possession, 81.7% pass success and 15.3 shots per game.
That matters against a Stoke side who also like the ball. Mark Robins’ team average 52.4% possession and prefer to play with width, but they often do their work in their own half and can struggle when forced to defend repeated attacking waves.
Ipswich should enjoy more sustained spells in Stoke territory. The question is whether Stoke can survive those phases without letting the game drift into one long defensive exercise.
Stoke’s route is on the break and down the right
Stoke still have a clear way into this contest. They are strong on the counter, they attack down the right, and they can create long-shot chances. That gives them an outlet when Ipswich push bodies forward.
Players like Million Manhoef, Bae Jun-Ho and Jesurun Rak-Sakyi need to make those moments count. Sorba Thomas remains Stoke’s biggest attacking producer with 9 goals and 8 assists, and his quality can turn a stretched phase into something dangerous very quickly.
But there is a catch. Stoke are weak at finishing chances and weak at staying onside, and that can kill momentum. Against an Ipswich side that defend leads well and are strong at defending set pieces, wasted attacking moments can become expensive.
Key Zones
Ipswich’s most dangerous work may come through the middle. Their style is built around through balls and central attacks, and Núñez is a major part of that with 7 assists and a strong rating in midfield. Jack Clarke brings goals from wide or inside lanes, while George Hirst offers a focal point up front.
That puts serious pressure on Stoke’s centre-backs and holding midfielders. Stoke are weak at stopping opponents from creating chances, and that is a dangerous flaw against a side that specialise in making openings through individual quality and quick combinations.
There is also a set-piece angle. Stoke are weak at defending dead balls, while Ipswich are strong from them. Even if the game is tight in open play, one smart delivery could crack it open.
Game-State Scenarios
If Stoke are going to make life uncomfortable, the game probably needs to feel broken rather than polished. They need tackles, second balls, quick transitions and moments where Ipswich are forced to retreat instead of settling into their passing rhythm.
That is possible, because Ipswich do have a weakness against counter-attacks and can make individual errors. Stoke must attack that weakness with directness and pace, not with slow possession that lets Ipswich reset.
Key Moments to Watch
- Ipswich’s central combinations: Núñez, Clarke and Hirst can pull Stoke’s shape apart if the passes arrive early and cleanly.
- Stoke on the right flank: Stoke attack down that side, and that is where they may find their best route into the box.
- Set pieces at both ends: Stoke are vulnerable here, while Ipswich are strong in both attacking and defensive set-piece phases.
- The first goal: Stoke’s average first goal comes at 38 minutes, while Ipswich score their first at 43 minutes on average, so patience could matter before the game opens up.
- Offside and discipline: Stoke average 2.78 offsides per game and have four red cards across their matches, which shows how easily their aggression can become self-defeating.
What Could Go Wrong?
For Stoke, the risk is obvious. They may enjoy spells on the ball without doing enough with them, then get picked apart by sharper movement and cleaner passing once Ipswich settle.
For Ipswich, the danger sits in transition. They are vulnerable to counters, Stoke are strong in that area, and one loose pass in midfield could turn a controlled away performance into a messy, emotional scrap. That is why this fixture feels live. Ipswich may have the stronger platform, but Stoke still have enough bite to turn the night awkward.
📊 Market Insights & Tactical Analysis
Match Result (1X2)
This is the most straightforward market where you select a Home Win, Draw, or Away Win. It covers the result at the end of 90 minutes plus injury time.
Pro: High liquidity and clear outcomes. Con: No insurance if the match ends in a draw.
Correct Score
A high-variance market where you must predict the exact final scoreline. Because it is harder to get right, the prices are significantly higher than 1X2 markets.
Pro: Large potential returns. Con: Highly volatile; a single late goal can ruin the selection.
🎯 Rationale: Ipswich Town to Win
Ipswich Town enter this fixture with a clear statistical and tactical superiority. Sitting fourth in the Championship with 64 points, their promotion ambitions are fuelled by an elite attacking output that averages 15.3 shots per game. This high volume of pressure has resulted in 61 league goals, a figure that dwarfs Stoke’s return of 39. Kieran McKenna’s side specialise in central combinations and through balls, a style that directly exploits Stoke’s known weakness in stopping opponents from creating high-quality chances.
⚔️ Tactical Indicators
- Ipswich average 56.1% possession and 48.84 dangerous attacks per match.
- Stoke City are winless in 10 of their last 11 league matches.
- Stoke are missing key defensive cover in Bosun Lawal and Junior Tchamadeu.
Risk Factor: Ipswich are occasionally vulnerable to counter-attacks, which is a specific area where Stoke’s right-flank speed could cause issues if the visitors lose discipline in transition.
🎯 Rationale: Correct Score 0-2
A 2-0 victory for the visitors is supported by both current form and historical patterns in this specific matchup. Ipswich have displayed remarkable defensive resilience against the Potters, keeping clean sheets in their last three Championship meetings. Stoke’s attacking struggles are evidenced by their lower shot volume (11.0 per game) and a tendency to waste opportunities in the final third. With Stoke missing aggression in their defensive transitions due to injury, Ipswich’s clinical finishers like George Hirst and Jack Clarke are expected to capitalise on sustained spells of possession.
Risk Factor: Stoke average 5.43 corners per game, and if they manage to exploit their set-piece volume against the run of play, it would break Ipswich’s run of clean sheets in this fixture.
Key Tactical Mismatch
Ranked as a major strength. Ipswich capitalise on dead-ball deliveries to create high-value chances.
Statistically weak at defending set pieces. Often concede through lack of organisation during restarts.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
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