Blackburn vs Leicester Prediction, Odds & Tips
Blackburn vs Leicester Prediction and Tips
Leicester won 1-0 at Ewood Park, landing our model's 37% pick for a Leicester victory. The visitors broke the deadlock through a single goal in what proved a tight contest; Blackburn, despite showing some attacking intent in recent matches, could not find an equaliser. Leicester's defensive solidity held firm against a Blackburn side that had scored in four of their last five outings. The result moves Leicester closer to their promotion push while Blackburn remain in the hunt. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Blackburn vs Leicester Prediction, Odds and Betting Tips
Our AI analyses form, head-to-head records, squad news and odds to provide data-driven predictions for Blackburn vs Leicester. All tips are for informational purposes only and do not constitute betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You must be 18 or over to gamble. Please gamble responsibly. For help, visit GambleAware.
Our pick
Leicester to win
Result
Blackburn v Leicester
AI Prediction Result
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Survival on the Line: Blackburn Host Leicester in a Championship Relegation Decider
Sophie Hargreaves ยท 17 April 2026
There are matches where the table tells you everything you need to know before a ball is kicked. Saturday's meeting between Blackburn Rovers and Leicester City at Ewood Park is one of those matches. Blackburn sit twentieth in the Championship. Leicester are twenty-third. Between them, these two clubs have conceded one hundred and seventeen goals across the season. That number is not a footnote. It is the story of the entire afternoon.
The Shape of the Problem
Watch this. When you look at Blackburn's defensive record, thirty-eight goals scored against fifty-three conceded, the first thing a coaching eye picks up is not the volume of goals against. It is the ratio. Blackburn have scored with reasonable frequency for a side in their position. The problem is structural at the back. That is a coaching issue, not an individual one. When a team concedes that number across a season, you are looking at a pattern in how they defend as a unit, how they set their shape without the ball, and how consistently their defensive reference points hold up under pressure.
Leicester's numbers tell a version of the same story with a sharper edge. Fifty-four goals scored. Sixty-four conceded. The thing nobody is talking about is that Leicester have actually been the more productive attacking side in this fixture on paper. They arrive at Ewood Park having found the net more often than almost anyone else in the bottom half of the table. The difficulty is that their defensive structure has given back more than it should at every turn.
Rewind to the underlying pattern for both sides across the campaign. These are not teams that have been passive or lacking in movement in the final third. They have created. The issue has been at the other end, and specifically in how their defensive shapes have responded to opposition triggers in transition. That is the detail that shapes how Saturday afternoon unfolds.
What Ewood Park Means for Blackburn
Home advantage carries real weight in a match of this nature, and not simply because of the crowd. Blackburn will look to use their preparation on home ground to establish a defensive reference point early. The game plan for the hosts will almost certainly prioritise keeping the scoreline level in the opening period, denying Leicester the chance to build any momentum from their attacking structure.
The difficulty for Blackburn is that Leicester's attacking output across the season has been considerable for a side in the relegation zone. Fifty-four goals is not the return of a team that has struggled to create. It is the return of a team that has created and then been undone by what happens at the other end. If Blackburn's defensive pattern holds, they have a genuine platform to work from. If it breaks down at a set piece or in transition, the game opens up in ways that their season-long record suggests they struggle to manage.
Leicester's Attacking Pattern and Where the Game Is Won
The thing nobody is talking about when it comes to Leicester is how their attacking movement generates the goals. Fifty-four for the season means they have been finding the net consistently, even as the defeats have mounted. That tells you their game plan in possession has had genuine structure to it. The problem has been the defensive side of that same structure, the moments after losing the ball and the organisation required to reset.
Watch this in the context of Saturday. If Leicester can get into their attacking patterns and apply pressure in the first twenty minutes, they have the goal-scoring record to suggest they are capable of taking the lead. But Ewood Park is not a neutral venue, and Blackburn will look to use the crowd and their home preparation to disrupt that rhythm early.
Rewind to what both teams' defensive records suggest about set pieces. Fifty-three goals conceded for Blackburn and sixty-four for Leicester across the season. In matches where defensive structure has been consistently vulnerable, set pieces become a significant trigger. Both sides will be aware of this. The coaching staff on either bench will have spent time this week working on their set-piece detail, both in terms of delivery and defensive organisation. That preparation often decides matches at this level of the table more than any other single factor.
The Bigger Picture
Strip away the emotion that comes with a relegation battle and what you have is two teams with very similar profiles. Both score. Both concede. Both have found it difficult to build the defensive consistency that keeps you out of trouble over the course of a long season. The difference on Saturday may come down to which side can impose their structure for longer periods and which defensive unit holds its shape at the critical moments.
Blackburn's position in twentieth place gives them a marginal foothold above the worst of the trouble, but the goal difference tells a more sobering story. Leicester, in twenty-third, need the result more acutely in terms of the table. That need can sharpen a team's focus. It can also introduce anxiety into defensive decision-making at precisely the moments when clarity is required.
This is the kind of fixture where the fine detail of preparation separates the sides. Not desire, not effort, but the clarity of the game plan and how well both sets of players execute the patterns they have worked on through the week. Saturday at Ewood Park will not be a comfortable watch, but it will be a revealing one.
The Tip
Given both teams' season-long defensive vulnerability, the both teams to score market looks well-supported. Fifty-three goals conceded for Blackburn and sixty-four for Leicester across the campaign indicates neither side has the defensive structure to shut a match out reliably. I would also look at the first goalscorer from a set-piece delivery, given how frequently both defences have been exposed in those moments. Both teams to score is the clear, well-reasoned selection here.
Read full preview
There are matches where the table tells you everything you need to know before a ball is kicked. Saturday's meeting between Blackburn Rovers and Leicester City at Ewood Park is one of those matches. Blackburn sit twentieth in the Championship. Leicester are twenty-third. Between them, these two clubs have conceded one hundred and seventeen goals across the season. That number is not a footnote. It is the story of the entire afternoon.
The Shape of the Problem
Watch this. When you look at Blackburn's defensive record, thirty-eight goals scored against fifty-three conceded, the first thing a coaching eye picks up is not the volume of goals against. It is the ratio. Blackburn have scored with reasonable frequency for a side in their position. The problem is structural at the back. That is a coaching issue, not an individual one. When a team concedes that number across a season, you are looking at a pattern in how they defend as a unit, how they set their shape without the ball, and how consistently their defensive reference points hold up under pressure.
Leicester's numbers tell a version of the same story with a sharper edge. Fifty-four goals scored. Sixty-four conceded. The thing nobody is talking about is that Leicester have actually been the more productive attacking side in this fixture on paper. They arrive at Ewood Park having found the net more often than almost anyone else in the bottom half of the table. The difficulty is that their defensive structure has given back more than it should at every turn.
Rewind to the underlying pattern for both sides across the campaign. These are not teams that have been passive or lacking in movement in the final third. They have created. The issue has been at the other end, and specifically in how their defensive shapes have responded to opposition triggers in transition. That is the detail that shapes how Saturday afternoon unfolds.
What Ewood Park Means for Blackburn
Home advantage carries real weight in a match of this nature, and not simply because of the crowd. Blackburn will look to use their preparation on home ground to establish a defensive reference point early. The game plan for the hosts will almost certainly prioritise keeping the scoreline level in the opening period, denying Leicester the chance to build any momentum from their attacking structure.
The difficulty for Blackburn is that Leicester's attacking output across the season has been considerable for a side in the relegation zone. Fifty-four goals is not the return of a team that has struggled to create. It is the return of a team that has created and then been undone by what happens at the other end. If Blackburn's defensive pattern holds, they have a genuine platform to work from. If it breaks down at a set piece or in transition, the game opens up in ways that their season-long record suggests they struggle to manage.
Leicester's Attacking Pattern and Where the Game Is Won
The thing nobody is talking about when it comes to Leicester is how their attacking movement generates the goals. Fifty-four for the season means they have been finding the net consistently, even as the defeats have mounted. That tells you their game plan in possession has had genuine structure to it. The problem has been the defensive side of that same structure, the moments after losing the ball and the organisation required to reset.
Watch this in the context of Saturday. If Leicester can get into their attacking patterns and apply pressure in the first twenty minutes, they have the goal-scoring record to suggest they are capable of taking the lead. But Ewood Park is not a neutral venue, and Blackburn will look to use the crowd and their home preparation to disrupt that rhythm early.
Rewind to what both teams' defensive records suggest about set pieces. Fifty-three goals conceded for Blackburn and sixty-four for Leicester across the season. In matches where defensive structure has been consistently vulnerable, set pieces become a significant trigger. Both sides will be aware of this. The coaching staff on either bench will have spent time this week working on their set-piece detail, both in terms of delivery and defensive organisation. That preparation often decides matches at this level of the table more than any other single factor.
The Bigger Picture
Strip away the emotion that comes with a relegation battle and what you have is two teams with very similar profiles. Both score. Both concede. Both have found it difficult to build the defensive consistency that keeps you out of trouble over the course of a long season. The difference on Saturday may come down to which side can impose their structure for longer periods and which defensive unit holds its shape at the critical moments.
Blackburn's position in twentieth place gives them a marginal foothold above the worst of the trouble, but the goal difference tells a more sobering story. Leicester, in twenty-third, need the result more acutely in terms of the table. That need can sharpen a team's focus. It can also introduce anxiety into defensive decision-making at precisely the moments when clarity is required.
This is the kind of fixture where the fine detail of preparation separates the sides. Not desire, not effort, but the clarity of the game plan and how well both sets of players execute the patterns they have worked on through the week. Saturday at Ewood Park will not be a comfortable watch, but it will be a revealing one.
The Tip
Given both teams' season-long defensive vulnerability, the both teams to score market looks well-supported. Fifty-three goals conceded for Blackburn and sixty-four for Leicester across the campaign indicates neither side has the defensive structure to shut a match out reliably. I would also look at the first goalscorer from a set-piece delivery, given how frequently both defences have been exposed in those moments. Both teams to score is the clear, well-reasoned selection here.
Blackburn
Blackburn show mixed form with one win, one draw, one loss across their last three. They beat Sheffield United 3-1 but lost 0-3 at Southampton; three of their last five ended goalless or 1-1. xG for stands at 3.00 per match. They've conceded 5 goals in recent outings and sit 20th in the league, deep in relegation trouble with limited margin for error.
Leicester
Leicester have won none of their last five, recording one draw and one loss in that span. They drew 1-1 with Millwall and Sheffield Wednesday but lost to Portsmouth and Swansea without scoring. Goal difference is poor at 1 for, 2 against. Position 23 reflects their struggle; our model sees a side lacking cutting edge and defensive solidity.
Run-in & context
Both teams are battling relegation with Blackburn 20th and Leicester 23rd. Blackburn's BTTS percentage sits at 67 per cent, suggesting attacking intent despite defensive frailty. Leicester have managed only 50 per cent BTTS and zero clean sheets in recent matches. This run-in fixture carries survival weight; neither side can afford further slips as the season closes.
Injury impact
Blackburn are missing 7 players. Impact rating: 20/100.
Leicester have a near-full squad available.
Venue
Ewood Park
Blackburn, Lancashire, England
Weather
Weather data unavailable for this venue.
Set pieces
- BlackburnUnavailable
- LeicesterUnavailable
Match Probabilities
Full-Time Result
Both Teams to Score
Over/Under 2.5 Goals
Goals Markets
More Markets
Double Chance
Half-Time Result
BTTS in Both Halves
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Match Centre
Lineups, live stats, full odds comparison, and in-depth match data for Blackburn vs Leicester.
SSR Ratings
| Metric | ||
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 1330 | 1497 |
| Attack | 1506 | 1509 |
| Defence | 1491 | 1501 |
| Goals Index | 1501 | 1490 |
| BTTS Index | 1519 | 1507 |
๐ Post-Match Analysis
Leicester Win at Ewood Park to Cement Championship Standing as Blackburn Fall Short
Leicester claimed a hard-fought 1-0 victory at Blackburn in the EFL Championship, a result that felt, in the end, entirely in keeping with the quality that has defined their season. Blackburn, for all...
Form Guide (Last 5)
Head-to-Head
1 meetings| Market | Count | Rate | Streak |
|---|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes) | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Over 2.5 | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Over 1.5 | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Under 2.5 | 1/1 | 100% | 1 |
| Blackburn Clean Sheet | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Leicester Clean Sheet | 1/1 | 100% | 1 |
Match History
Match facts at a glance
- Kickoff
- Venue
- Ewood Park, Blackburn, Lancashire ยท capacity 31,367
- Competition
- EFL Championship
- Last meeting
- Blackburn 0-1 Leicester (2 May 2026)
- Top scorer ยท Leicester
- Stephy Mavididi (1 goal)
- Most yellows ยท Blackburn
- Axel Henriksson (5 YC)
- Most yellows ยท Leicester
- Caleb Okoli (5 YC)
- BTTS this season ยท Blackburn
- 100%
- BTTS this season ยท Leicester
- 40%
- Our prediction
- Leicester to win (37%)
- Our value pick
- Leicester Win (+7.2% edge vs market)
Frequently Asked Questions
Curious how this prediction was produced? See our methodology.
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All predictions and analysis on this page are provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Odds displayed are sourced from third-party bookmakers and are subject to change. SportSignals may receive commission from bookmaker links on this page.
Last updated 13 days ago ยท


