Last updated: Sunday 19 April 2026. Two days out from Tuesday's League One meeting at Edgeley Park, and this fixture is coming into sharper focus. Stockport County sit fifth in the division with 64 goals scored and 53 conceded across the campaign. Mansfield Town are fourteenth, having found the net 52 times and shipped 45. The numbers tell two different stories, and that is exactly what makes this worth watching.
Where Both Clubs Stand
Let's start with the context. Stockport's attacking output of 64 goals is one of the more impressive tallies in the division at this stage, but the 53 they have conceded is the thread that will concern their supporters most. Fifth place keeps them in the promotion conversation, yet the gap between where they are and where they want to be remains the real question heading into the final weeks of the season.
Mansfield arrive in fourteenth, a position that tells you they are comfortably clear of any relegation anxiety but equally distant from anything meaningful at the top. Their defensive record is the more solid of the two sides, 45 goals conceded compared to Stockport's 53, and that picture matters when you consider how this game might be set up tactically.
The Form Picture Heading In
The weekend just gone will have done plenty to shape the mood in both camps. Stockport's recent results have kept them in and around the play-off places, but consistency has been the challenge throughout this campaign. Every dropped point at Edgeley Park between now and the end of the season carries consequences, and that adds a particular edge to a Tuesday night fixture under the lights.
Mansfield have shown enough this season to suggest they are not simply here to make up the numbers. A goals scored tally of 52 means they carry a genuine threat going forward, and away from home they have demonstrated the kind of directness that can unsettle sides who are chasing results. But here is what nobody is asking: does Mansfield's superior defensive record actually make them the harder side to break down in this one? On the numbers alone, yes. And that changes how you approach a betting angle on this match.
Squad News and Availability
Full confirmed squads are expected to be announced on Monday, with both managers likely to provide their pre-match press conference updates ahead of the 48-hour build-up. Neither club has confirmed significant absentees at the time of this update, though the busy late-season schedule means fatigue and rotation are always a factor at this stage of the League One calendar. We will refresh availability details as soon as official announcements land.
Odds and Betting Angle
Near-final market pricing has Stockport as favourites at home, which makes sense given their league position and the advantage of playing at Edgeley Park. Mansfield are available at a bigger price for the away win, and the draw sits in the middle of the market as it tends to do in fixtures where the gap in quality is present but not definitive.
My honest view on this one: I would leave the match result alone. Stockport have the quality and the motivation, but Mansfield's defensive solidity, only 45 conceded, gives them a genuine platform to frustrate at a ground where the home side have not always made it easy for themselves this season.
The angle I find more compelling is both teams to score. Stockport's 64 goals tells you they will create. Mansfield's 52 at the other end tells you they are not a side that simply parks and defends. Both sets of numbers support an open enough game for goals at both ends. And that brings us to the value question: BTTS in a fixture like this, where both sides have genuine attacking output and neither has a watertight defensive record, is often where the picture makes most sense.
What to Watch For on the Night
The first fifteen minutes will be telling. Stockport at home under pressure tend to come out with energy and look to impose themselves early. If Mansfield absorb that opening spell and stay compact, the game could shift in a direction that makes the home crowd nervous. Conversely, if Stockport find an early goal and the pressure lifts, this could open up considerably in the second half.
Mansfield's ability to transition quickly when they win the ball is worth watching. With 52 goals from a fourteenth-placed side, the chances are being created somewhere, and a Stockport backline that has conceded 53 times this season will need to stay switched on to the counter-attacking threat.
Let's also not overlook the psychological dimension. For Stockport, this is a fixture they are expected to win at home, which brings its own pressure. Expectation is a weight, and Mansfield, with nothing existential riding on the result, can play with a certain freedom that sometimes produces the most awkward opponents.
The Bigger Picture
Zoom out for a moment. Stockport's season has been built on that attacking platform, 64 goals is a genuine statement of intent in League One. But fifth place with the campaign entering its final stretch means there is no margin for complacency in home fixtures against sides in the bottom half. Every point from here is a negotiation, and Tuesday night is one they need to get right.
For Mansfield, a positive result at a promotion-chasing side would represent exactly the kind of performance that shapes end-of-season momentum, even when a top-half finish is no longer on the table. Players remember good results in the final weeks. Managers remember them too when squads are assessed in the summer.
Kick-off at Edgeley Park is Tuesday 21 April 2026. This preview will be updated again closer to kick-off if significant squad news emerges.


