Ipswich vs QPR Prediction, Odds & Tips
Ipswich vs QPR Prediction and Tips
Ipswich beat QPR 3-0 at Portman Road in the Championship. Our model favored an Ipswich win at 62 percent probability, and the pick landed cleanly. The hosts dominated a struggling QPR side that had managed only one draw and one loss across their previous five matches. Ipswich's recent form showed two wins, two draws and a loss over the same span, and they converted that underlying quality into a decisive result on the day. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Ipswich vs QPR Prediction, Odds and Betting Tips
Our AI analyses form, head-to-head records, squad news and odds to provide data-driven predictions for Ipswich vs QPR. 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
Ipswich to win
Result
Ipswich v QPR
AI Prediction Result
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Ipswich vs QPR Preview: Can Town's Prolific Attack Expose a Leaky Rangers Backline?
Sophie Hargreaves · 17 April 2026
Last updated 25 April 2026. With a week to go until this Championship fixture at Portman Road, the picture is becoming clearer. Ipswich sit third in the table having scored 75 goals and conceded 45 this season. QPR arrive in 13th, with 59 goals scored and 67 conceded. On paper, the structural contrast between these two sides is significant. The detail, as always, is in how that contrast plays out across ninety minutes.
The Tactical Landscape
Watch this. When you look at Ipswich's attacking output across this campaign, 75 goals from third position tells you something specific about their game plan. This is not a side that grinds out results through defensive solidity alone. They are built to generate volume in the final third, and their structure in and out of possession is designed around creating numerical advantages in attacking areas.
The thing nobody is talking about is the 45 goals conceded by Ipswich. That number places them in a reasonable defensive position for a top-three side, but it also tells you they are not a team that suffocates opponents into submission. They allow a degree of openness in games, and that openness cuts both ways. Against a QPR side that has scored 59 times this season, there is enough evidence to suggest this will not be a closed affair.
Rewind to QPR's defensive record and the number that stands out is 67 goals conceded in 13th position. That is a structural problem, not an effort problem. When a side concedes at that volume across a season, you are looking at patterns in their defensive shape, their press triggers, and their recovery movement. That is a coaching issue. It suggests QPR's defensive structure has gaps that a well-prepared attacking side can identify and exploit through deliberate pattern play rather than individual moments.
Where Ipswich Can Hurt Them
The reference point here is simple. Ipswich have scored 75 goals against Championship defences this season. QPR have conceded 67. When an attack of that productivity meets a defence with those vulnerabilities, the preparation work for Ipswich's coaching staff almost writes itself. You look for the movement patterns that QPR struggle to track, you identify the trigger moments in their defensive shape, and you build your game plan around those specific details.
Set pieces will matter here. A defence that concedes 67 goals across a season is rarely airtight at dead balls. The structure at corners and free kicks, the reference points each defender holds, the clarity of their zonal or man-marking responsibilities: these are the areas where a well-drilled attacking side picks up points that the highlights rarely capture. This is where Ipswich's home advantage and preparation time should count for something.
QPR's Route Back Into the Match
It would be straightforward to dismiss QPR given the positional gap, but 59 goals scored from 13th tells you their attacking patterns have some genuine quality. They can create. The question is whether their game plan on the road involves the same attacking intent or whether they set up to be more compact and hit Ipswich on the counter.
If QPR sit deep and look to exploit the space Ipswich's attacking structure can leave behind their defensive line, the 45 goals conceded by the home side suggests there is something to aim at. The movement in behind, the trigger for a forward run, the timing of a second ball: these are the details QPR will work on in the days before this fixture if they are approaching it with a clear game plan rather than simply trying to manage the occasion.
Match Prediction and Probabilities
Based on the structural evidence available and the quality of each side's seasonal record, the probability breakdown for this fixture sits as follows. An Ipswich home win carries a probability of approximately 58 percent. A draw is estimated at around 22 percent. A QPR away win comes in at roughly 20 percent. These figures reflect Ipswich's home advantage, their superior league position, and QPR's defensive vulnerability against high-volume attacking sides.
In terms of market pricing, those probabilities translate to approximate fair odds of 1.72 for the Ipswich win, 4.55 for the draw, and 5.00 for QPR. Any prices at or above those levels on the Ipswich win represent reasonable value given the structural case for the home side.
Betting Angles Worth Considering
The market I keep coming back to is both teams to score. Ipswich concede. QPR score. QPR concede. Ipswich score. The numbers across this season point toward a match with goals at both ends, and that pattern has more structural backing than a simple gut feel about an open game.
For those who want a more precise entry point, the set-piece goalscorer market is worth attention. A QPR defence that has conceded 67 goals this season will have been tested repeatedly at dead balls throughout the campaign. An Ipswich player from a set-piece delivery at a corner or wide free kick represents the kind of specific, preparation-backed angle I prefer. The detail is in identifying which Ipswich players carry the aerial or late-run threat from those situations, and that is something to monitor through the early team news in the coming days.
On clean sheets, the 67 QPR goals conceded makes an Ipswich clean sheet a difficult sell despite their attacking dominance. I would leave that market alone here. The value is in the goals, not the shutout.
Early Team News
Confirmed squad news for both sides is still emerging at this stage, with the match seven days out. No significant injury concerns have been confirmed in available reports as of this update. The picture should sharpen considerably by midweek, and this preview will be updated as further information becomes available. Both managers will be making decisions about rotation and recovery in the final days of preparation, and those calls could affect the shape and intensity of both starting elevens.
Final Thought
This is a game where the structural evidence points clearly toward Ipswich. Their attacking output, their home environment, and the defensive record QPR carry into this fixture all support that conclusion. The interesting coaching question is whether QPR arrive with a defined game plan to disrupt Ipswich's patterns, or whether the gap in quality tells across the ninety minutes. On current evidence, Ipswich to win and both teams to score is the combination that has the most structural backing going into Saturday.
Read full preview
Last updated 25 April 2026. With a week to go until this Championship fixture at Portman Road, the picture is becoming clearer. Ipswich sit third in the table having scored 75 goals and conceded 45 this season. QPR arrive in 13th, with 59 goals scored and 67 conceded. On paper, the structural contrast between these two sides is significant. The detail, as always, is in how that contrast plays out across ninety minutes.
The Tactical Landscape
Watch this. When you look at Ipswich's attacking output across this campaign, 75 goals from third position tells you something specific about their game plan. This is not a side that grinds out results through defensive solidity alone. They are built to generate volume in the final third, and their structure in and out of possession is designed around creating numerical advantages in attacking areas.
The thing nobody is talking about is the 45 goals conceded by Ipswich. That number places them in a reasonable defensive position for a top-three side, but it also tells you they are not a team that suffocates opponents into submission. They allow a degree of openness in games, and that openness cuts both ways. Against a QPR side that has scored 59 times this season, there is enough evidence to suggest this will not be a closed affair.
Rewind to QPR's defensive record and the number that stands out is 67 goals conceded in 13th position. That is a structural problem, not an effort problem. When a side concedes at that volume across a season, you are looking at patterns in their defensive shape, their press triggers, and their recovery movement. That is a coaching issue. It suggests QPR's defensive structure has gaps that a well-prepared attacking side can identify and exploit through deliberate pattern play rather than individual moments.
Where Ipswich Can Hurt Them
The reference point here is simple. Ipswich have scored 75 goals against Championship defences this season. QPR have conceded 67. When an attack of that productivity meets a defence with those vulnerabilities, the preparation work for Ipswich's coaching staff almost writes itself. You look for the movement patterns that QPR struggle to track, you identify the trigger moments in their defensive shape, and you build your game plan around those specific details.
Set pieces will matter here. A defence that concedes 67 goals across a season is rarely airtight at dead balls. The structure at corners and free kicks, the reference points each defender holds, the clarity of their zonal or man-marking responsibilities: these are the areas where a well-drilled attacking side picks up points that the highlights rarely capture. This is where Ipswich's home advantage and preparation time should count for something.
QPR's Route Back Into the Match
It would be straightforward to dismiss QPR given the positional gap, but 59 goals scored from 13th tells you their attacking patterns have some genuine quality. They can create. The question is whether their game plan on the road involves the same attacking intent or whether they set up to be more compact and hit Ipswich on the counter.
If QPR sit deep and look to exploit the space Ipswich's attacking structure can leave behind their defensive line, the 45 goals conceded by the home side suggests there is something to aim at. The movement in behind, the trigger for a forward run, the timing of a second ball: these are the details QPR will work on in the days before this fixture if they are approaching it with a clear game plan rather than simply trying to manage the occasion.
Match Prediction and Probabilities
Based on the structural evidence available and the quality of each side's seasonal record, the probability breakdown for this fixture sits as follows. An Ipswich home win carries a probability of approximately 58 percent. A draw is estimated at around 22 percent. A QPR away win comes in at roughly 20 percent. These figures reflect Ipswich's home advantage, their superior league position, and QPR's defensive vulnerability against high-volume attacking sides.
In terms of market pricing, those probabilities translate to approximate fair odds of 1.72 for the Ipswich win, 4.55 for the draw, and 5.00 for QPR. Any prices at or above those levels on the Ipswich win represent reasonable value given the structural case for the home side.
Betting Angles Worth Considering
The market I keep coming back to is both teams to score. Ipswich concede. QPR score. QPR concede. Ipswich score. The numbers across this season point toward a match with goals at both ends, and that pattern has more structural backing than a simple gut feel about an open game.
For those who want a more precise entry point, the set-piece goalscorer market is worth attention. A QPR defence that has conceded 67 goals this season will have been tested repeatedly at dead balls throughout the campaign. An Ipswich player from a set-piece delivery at a corner or wide free kick represents the kind of specific, preparation-backed angle I prefer. The detail is in identifying which Ipswich players carry the aerial or late-run threat from those situations, and that is something to monitor through the early team news in the coming days.
On clean sheets, the 67 QPR goals conceded makes an Ipswich clean sheet a difficult sell despite their attacking dominance. I would leave that market alone here. The value is in the goals, not the shutout.
Early Team News
Confirmed squad news for both sides is still emerging at this stage, with the match seven days out. No significant injury concerns have been confirmed in available reports as of this update. The picture should sharpen considerably by midweek, and this preview will be updated as further information becomes available. Both managers will be making decisions about rotation and recovery in the final days of preparation, and those calls could affect the shape and intensity of both starting elevens.
Final Thought
This is a game where the structural evidence points clearly toward Ipswich. Their attacking output, their home environment, and the defensive record QPR carry into this fixture all support that conclusion. The interesting coaching question is whether QPR arrive with a defined game plan to disrupt Ipswich's patterns, or whether the gap in quality tells across the ninety minutes. On current evidence, Ipswich to win and both teams to score is the combination that has the most structural backing going into Saturday.
Ipswich
Ipswich sit second, unbeaten in four of their last five matches. Two draws and a win across recent outings show mixed momentum; they've conceded five goals in five games despite 40% clean sheet rate. xG for stands at 9.00 with six goals scored. Our model notes inconsistency in chance conversion and defensive solidity, though possession control remains a strength at this stage of the season.
QPR
QPR occupy 14th place, winless in their last five; one draw and four defeats define recent form. xG for of just 1.10 and zero clean sheets across five matches highlight severe attacking and defensive fragility. They've conceded three goals in two of their last three outings. Our model identifies structural vulnerabilities that suggest limited attacking threat and persistent backline issues.
Run-in & context
Final-day Championship fixture with Ipswich chasing promotion from second place. QPR's relegation battle contrasts sharply with hosts' title ambitions. The 12-point gap between positions reflects divergent seasons. Ipswich need points to secure automatic promotion; QPR seek any result to improve survival prospects. Our model suggests home advantage and form disparity will be decisive factors.
Injury impact
Ipswich are missing 3 players, including Cédric Kipré. Impact rating: 29/100.
QPR are missing 2 players, including Jake Clarke-Salter. Impact rating: 20/100.
Venue
Portman Road
Ipswich, Suffolk, England
Weather
Weather data unavailable for this venue.
Set pieces
- Ipswich9.0 corners / g
- QPRUnavailable
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
Probabilities are model estimates, not guarantees. 18+ · Past performance does not guarantee future results · BeGambleAware (UK): 0808 802 0133.
Match Centre
Lineups, live stats, full odds comparison, and in-depth match data for Ipswich vs QPR.
SSR Ratings
| Metric | ||
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 1529 | 1468 |
| Attack | 1519 | 1482 |
| Defence | 1560 | 1332 |
| Goals Index | 1481 | 1518 |
| BTTS Index | 1500 | 1452 |
📝 Post-Match Analysis
Ipswich 3-0 QPR: Championship Leaders Confirm Dominance With Commanding Final-Day Win
Ipswich closed out their Championship season in emphatic fashion, beating QPR 3-0 at Portman Road to finish as champions on 95 points. The result was a fitting summary of a side that has been the stan...
Form Guide (Last 5)
Head-to-Head
1 meetings| Market | Count | Rate | Streak |
|---|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes) | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Over 2.5 | 1/1 | 100% | 1 |
| Over 1.5 | 1/1 | 100% | - |
| Under 2.5 | 0/1 | 0% | - |
| Ipswich Clean Sheet | 1/1 | 100% | 1 |
| QPR Clean Sheet | 0/1 | 0% | - |
Match History
Match facts at a glance
- Kickoff
- Venue
- Portman Road, Ipswich, Suffolk · capacity 30,311
- Competition
- EFL Championship
- Last meeting
- Ipswich 3-0 QPR (2 May 2026)
- Top scorer · Ipswich
- Ben Johnson (1 goal)
- Top scorer · QPR
- Jonathan Varane (1 goal)
- Most yellows · Ipswich
- Jaden Philogene (3 YC)
- Most yellows · QPR
- Jonathan Varane (4 YC)
- BTTS this season · Ipswich
- 60%
- BTTS this season · QPR
- 100%
- Our prediction
- Ipswich to win (62%)
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 4 minutes ago ·


