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Can Stoke’s home edge puncture Preston’s unbeaten run? Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
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Both teams have seen significant goal action recently, including Estrela's 3-3 draw with Braga. Estoril's attack is statistically superior, but their defense is prone to errors on the break.
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Both teams are evenly matched in the standings and possess "weak" defensive ratings in areas the other team excels at (long shots and set pieces).
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Stoke vs Preston Predictions and Best Bets
Stoke City vs Preston North End — bet365 Market Snapshot
Swipe through key markets with illustrative probabilities and sample bet365 odds based on our match analysis.
Pricing shown below indicates a tight affair. Stoke hold home advantage, but Preston’s unbeaten streak makes the draw a significant factor in the 1X2 market.
Information only. Probabilities suggest single-goal margins or a low-scoring stalemate are the most realistic outcomes at the bet365 Stadium.
- Best defence meets a tight table race: Stoke have conceded 21 goals in 22 Championship games, the division’s best record, yet they sit eighth on 33 points—just three behind Preston.
- A fixture that often runs on fine margins: since 2018 these sides have met 14 times, with Stoke winning three, Preston six and five ending level, showing how frequently it stays close.
- Two different goal trends collide: only two of the last six Stoke–Preston meetings saw both teams score and over 2.5 goals landed once, yet Preston’s last nine games have had goals for both sides.
Control Indicators: Average Ball Possession
Stoke prefer to organise territory through circulation, while Preston are comfortable ceding the ball to turn the game into a series of physical contests.
Their 81% pass accuracy supports a structured approach designed to shift defensive blocks and limit opponent quality.
Preston rely on higher tackle counts and aerial wins to turn defensive moments into rapid attacking transitions.
Attacking Volume: Total Season Shots
Both teams find themselves creating almost identical volumes of chances, reflecting their closely matched positions in the Championship table.
Stoke take 65% of their shots from inside the box, matching Preston’s efficiency in reaching high-value scoring zones.
Preston’s slightly higher volume is supported by a significant 1,096 dangerous attacks recorded across their fixtures.
Boxing Day under the lights at the bet365 Stadium, and the table makes this one feel sharper than a typical mid-season Championship scrap. Stoke City start the night in eighth place on 33 points, looking up at a play-off line that’s still within touching distance. Preston North End arrive fifth on 36, with a bit more comfort—but not enough to get cosy.
That’s the neat little tension here: Stoke’s league results have been patchy, with just two wins in their last eight, yet they remain right in the mix. Preston, by contrast, are carrying momentum—undefeated in six Championship games—and the last month has given them a rhythm that travels.
Recent history between the sides hints at a fixture that rarely turns into a free-for-all. Since Stoke dropped into the second tier in 2018, they’ve met 14 times: Stoke have won three, Preston six, and five have finished level. Even in the nearer view, the balance is tight—Preston have won three of the previous seven, Stoke two—so the margins are usually fine.
So what does Boxing Day bring: Stoke’s home comfort, or Preston’s steady accumulation? The answer may lie less in grand statements and more in which team can impose its preferred type of match early—and which one blinks first.
Team News and Likely Set-Ups
Stoke’s biggest Boxing Day complication is on the right side: Junior Tchamadeu is away with Cameroon at the Africa Cup of Nations. There’s also a midfield absence with Lewis Baker set to miss the remaining few matches of 2026 due to an ankle injury, and Eric Bocat is ruled out until at least the start of 2026 with a muscle issue.
Those are three absences that tug at the spine and the balance. Baker’s contributions have been tangible this season—four goals and one assist in the Championship—and removing that kind of central influence can change how a side manages game-state moments: calming it down, speeding it up, or finding a finish when the game gets sticky.
Preston’s list is longer and it bites in key areas. Daniel Jebbison is out through illness, Jamal Lewis and Lewis Gibson are sidelined until 2026, and Robbie Brady is also not expected back until 2026. On top of that, Milutin Osmajic is suspended. That last one matters because Osmajic has four Championship goals this season, and he’s one of the forwards in the squad who has produced consistent minutes.
In short: Stoke lose a right-sided option, a goal-scoring midfielder, and a left-sided defender; Preston lose multiple options around the left side and forward line, plus a suspended attacker. On a day where legs can feel heavy and benches can matter, availability shapes the story before a ball is kicked.
How the Match Could Be Played
The baseline styles suggested by this season’s numbers point to a fascinating clash of priorities. Stoke generally keep more of the ball—55% possession across their matches, with 81% pass accuracy and an average of 421.71 passes per game. That profile tends to produce a match where the home side tries to organise territory through circulation: move it, shift the block, and work the ball into the areas that create repeatable chances.
Preston’s shape of play reads differently. They average 46% possession with 75% pass accuracy and 351.71 passes per game, yet they’re not passive. They win more aerial duels on average (22.1 aerials won per match in the Championship, compared with Stoke’s 16.2) and they put in more tackles too (348 total tackles to Stoke’s 294 across the same total match count shown). That combination can make for a side that’s comfortable letting you have parts of the ball, then turning the game into a series of contests—second balls, tackles, and direct forward moments.
The shot volume is almost identical—Stoke have taken 276 total shots (11.5 per game), Preston 281 (11.71 per game). The difference may come down to where those shots are coming from and how quickly they arrive. Both sides show the same split for inside/outside the box: 65% of shots from inside, 35% from outside. That suggests neither is simply lumping it and hoping; both are getting into the key areas at a decent rate.
So where’s the battleground? For Stoke, it’s likely about control and patience, particularly at home where they’ve won four of their last six. Their last two league wins have come at the bet365 Stadium, and there’s a clear incentive to start with authority: pin Preston back, force repeated defensive actions, and make the away side defend longer sequences.
For Preston, the game can be shaped by transitions and duels. Their away record over the listed recent six shows three wins, two draws and one defeat, and they’ve recently taken points on the road in multiple places. They can allow Stoke’s possession to become predictable, then break the rhythm with a win of the ball and a fast, purposeful move forward. The “dangerous attacks” totals lean Preston’s way too (1,096 to Stoke’s 986), hinting at a side that can turn moments into threat even without dominating the ball.
There’s also a subtle set-piece undertone. Stoke average 5.63 corners per game (135 total), Preston 4.79 (115). In a match that often runs close between these two, dead-ball pressure and repeated delivery can be a way to manufacture the kind of chance you can’t always carve out from open play.
The absences could tilt the zones. Without Tchamadeu, Stoke’s right-side options change. Without Bocat, the left side changes too—meaning Stoke may be balancing both flanks differently than usual. Preston’s left-sided injuries and Osmajic’s suspension could reshape how they attack and defend that corridor, potentially turning the wide areas into a test of depth rather than first-choice quality.
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The Numbers That Support the Story
The table adds real texture. Stoke are eighth with 33 points from 22 games, scoring 28 and conceding 21, while Preston are fifth with 36 points from 22, scoring 30 and conceding 23. Stoke’s defensive record is the standout: 21 conceded is the best in the division. That matters because it suggests their possession isn’t just for show; it can be part of a structure that limits the quality of what they give up.
Preston’s recent run also stacks neatly with a “stay in it, stay solid, keep collecting” identity. They’re unbeaten in six Championship games, and since losing 2-1 to Blackburn on November 21 they’ve won two and drawn four in the next six domestic matches. That’s a team that’s hard to put away, and it shapes how Stoke may need to approach the first goal. If you don’t get it, you can end up playing the match Preston want: controlled, stubborn, and decided by one moment.
Historically, Preston have had more joy in this fixture since 2018—six wins to Stoke’s three across 14 meetings. And the recent scoring pattern between these two is often restrained: both teams have scored in just two of the last six head-to-head games, and over 2.5 goals has landed only once in the last six. That leans into the idea of narrow margins.
But there’s a counterpoint in Preston’s broader recent matches: their last nine games in all competitions have seen both teams score. That contrast is what makes this one intriguing—does the matchup itself drag the game into a tighter, lower-scoring shape, or does Preston’s current pattern pull it into a more open exchange?
Key “Moments” to Watch
There’s a version of this match where the first 15 minutes tells you nearly everything. Stoke’s average first goal time is listed as 34 minutes; Preston’s is 39. That points towards a contest that can simmer before it boils. If Stoke can turn their home possession into early pressure—corners, second phases, bodies around the box—they can push Preston into defending a lot of territory.
Equally, if Preston can make Stoke’s possession feel sterile—passes in safe zones, limited access into the box—then one good break, one loose touch, one set-piece can swing it. Their higher aerial win rate is a practical weapon in these moments: it helps you relieve pressure and it helps you start attacks without needing 20-pass moves.
Watch the discipline of the duel. Both sides show identical totals for red cards (one each) and yellow cards (49 each). That’s not a warning siren on its own, but it does suggest these teams are not strangers to scrappy contests. If the match becomes stop-start, the side that manages second balls and restarts better can quietly take control.
There’s also the question of who supplies the final-third quality with notable absences in both squads. Stoke lose Baker’s goals from midfield; Preston lose Osmajic’s minutes and goals, plus Jebbison through illness. In a fixture that has often been decided by fine margins, removing a couple of familiar finishers can push the emphasis onto chance creation and set-piece volume.
What could go wrong with this read? Plenty. Championship matches can flip on a single deflection, an early mistake, or one moment of brilliance that doesn’t follow the evening’s pattern. And with recent head-to-heads often tight while Preston’s wider run has featured goals at both ends, this could just as easily become a game that ignores the script and turns into an exchange.
Best Bet for Stoke City vs Preston North End
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The Draw
Boxing Day in the Championship brings together two sides separated by just three points and a very similar outlook on defensive stability. While Stoke City enter the fixture in eighth place with 33 points, Preston North End sit three places higher in fifth, having accumulated 36 points from their opening 22 matches. The defining characteristic of this matchup is a shared statistical profile that points toward a balanced, closely contested affair where neither side appears equipped to dominate the other over 90 minutes.
Preston arrive as the division’s specialists in sharing the points. They have drawn nine of their 22 league games this season—the second-highest total in the Championship. This tendency to grind out results is underscored by their current six-game unbeaten streak, a run that includes four draws. Since a 2-1 defeat to Blackburn in late November, Preston have become exceptionally difficult to beat, showing the tactical discipline required to navigate tough away assignments.
Stoke’s case for a stalemate is built on a league-leading defensive record. They have conceded just 21 goals, the fewest in the division, which has allowed them to remain in play-off contention despite winning only two of their last eight league matches. This defensive solidity is paired with a high-possession style—averaging 55% per game—but one that often lacks the final-third punch to pull away from opponents, especially with the influential Lewis Baker sidelined. Baker has contributed four goals and an assist from midfield, and his absence removes a significant goal threat from the central areas.
The head-to-head history further reinforces the likelihood of a tight finish. Since 2018, five of the 14 meetings between these clubs have ended level, and the scoring patterns suggest a lack of separation; both teams have found the net in only two of the last six encounters. Preston’s ability to win aerial duels (22.1 per match) and their higher tackle count (348) allow them to disrupt Stoke’s patient build-up play, effectively neutralizing the home side’s 81% passing accuracy. With both teams missing key attacking personnel—Stoke without Baker and Preston missing the suspended Milutin Osmajic—the most logical outcome is a match where defensive structures remain on top.
What could go wrong
The primary risk to a draw is a breakthrough from a set-piece or a moment of transition. Stoke average 5.63 corners per game, and with Preston’s high aerial win rate, a dead-ball situation could easily settle a match of such fine margins. Additionally, while Preston have drawn many games recently, their last nine matches in all competitions have seen both teams score, suggesting that if the game opens up early, the defensive discipline that supports a draw could give way to a high-scoring exchange.
Correct score lean
1 – 1
Rationale
A 1-1 scoreline is the most probable outcome for two sides that consistently find ways to stay competitive without necessarily securing a win. Preston have a remarkable record of drawing matches this season, and a significant portion of their recent away results have ended in low-scoring stalemates, including a recent 1-1 against Norwich. Stoke’s league-best defense makes it unlikely they will concede multiple goals, yet their own scoring rate of 1.27 goals per game suggests they struggle to pull clear. Given that both teams average nearly identical shot volumes—11.5 for Stoke and 11.7 for Preston—a single goal apiece reflects their matched productivity.
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