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Scottish Premiership

St. Mirren vs Kilmarnock: Final Day Preview as Saints Bid to Cement Sixth Place

St. Mirren host Kilmarnock at the Simple Digital Arena on Saturday 9 May, with the home side carrying genuine purpose into what shapes up as a meaningful end-of-season fixture. Last updated the morning of kick-off, here is everything you need to know.

St. Mirren crest
St. Mirren
Scottish Premiership
vs
14.00 Saturday 9th May 2026
Kilmarnock crest
Kilmarnock
The Connoisseur
· 5 min read
Updated
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Last updated on the morning of Saturday 9 May 2026, this is the final word on a Scottish Premiership fixture that carries more weight than the mid-table positioning might initially suggest. St. Mirren welcome Kilmarnock to Paisley for a three o'clock kick-off, and while the championship has long since been decided elsewhere in the division, there is enough in the circumstances of both clubs to give this afternoon genuine meaning. Football has a way of finding its own reasons for caring, even when the grand narratives have already been written.

Where the Clubs Stand

The standings tell a clear story of two very different seasons. St. Mirren sit sixth in the Scottish Premiership with 49 points from 35 matches, a record of 14 wins, seven draws and 14 defeats. Their goal difference stands at minus four, which means they have been competitive but not dominant, a team that has given as much as it has taken across the course of the campaign. There is a certain honesty to that kind of season. You earn your place through consistency and effort rather than brilliance, and sixth place in the top flight of Scottish football represents a solid, respectable achievement for the club.

Kilmarnock arrive in a considerably more precarious position, carrying 43 points and a goal difference of minus nine from the same number of games. Ten wins, 13 draws and 12 defeats is the kind of record that speaks to a team that has struggled to impose itself, that has shared points when it needed to collect them and conceded goals when it could least afford to. A goals against tally of 57 across 35 matches is a concern that no honest observer could overlook.

The Shape of the Season

What people do not understand is how much the final weeks of a season can define how a campaign is remembered. A club finishes fifth or sixth, wins its last two or three matches with some quality and some spirit, and the supporters carry a warmth into the summer that shapes expectation for the next year. Equally, a limp conclusion, a performance without conviction, lingers in a way that mere league position does not capture.

St. Mirren's season has been one of fine margins. Their 47 goals scored and 51 conceded reflect a team that has been in games, that has created and has been vulnerable, that has played football with some intent. In my time as a striker, I always appreciated playing against sides like this, teams that committed to the contest rather than retreating from it. There is something to work with in a match like that, something to find if you are willing to look for it.

Kilmarnock, by contrast, have conceded 57 goals and scored 48, and with 12 losses from 35 games, they have not found the consistency that transforms a decent side into a reliable one. The craft is there in parts. Whether it comes together in a final away fixture, with nothing pressing on the result beyond pride and momentum, is the question that will define their afternoon.

Match Day Conditions and Final Thoughts on the Contest

The home advantage matters here, and not merely as a talking point. St. Mirren have built their points tally with the support of their own ground behind them, and on a Saturday afternoon in May, with the season drawing to its close, there is often a lightness to the occasion that suits a team playing with freedom rather than anxiety. The crowd can lift you in these moments, or it can simply allow you to play, which is sometimes the greater gift.

Kilmarnock will need to find something from the road. Their season record of ten wins and thirteen draws alongside twelve defeats suggests that they have often settled rather than seized, and against a home side with nothing to fear, settling is not enough. You cannot coach the will to impose yourself in the final match of a long campaign. That comes from somewhere deeper, from a collective understanding of what the afternoon means and a shared decision to make it count.

The 1-1 scoreline at 6.10 with Unibet is the market's way of saying that both teams are expected to contribute to the contest without either dominating it. That feels right to me as a reading of the situation. Both clubs have scored and conceded freely enough across the season that a quiet afternoon seems less likely than an open one.

The Signal and the Thinking Behind It

The signal on this match is St. Mirren to win at odds of 2.00 with Unibet, with a model probability of 54 per cent against the implied probability of 50 per cent. The edge is slim, the confidence measured. I find myself in agreement with the direction if not the certainty. Home advantage, a superior season record in terms of goal difference, and the platform of a final home match of the season all tilt toward the Saints.

The beautiful game does not always reward the beautiful team. But it does, with some regularity, reward the side that plays on its own ground, in front of its own supporters, with a clear and settled understanding of what it wants from the afternoon. St. Mirren have that today. Kilmarnock are the visitors, carrying a heavier defensive record, and they arrive without the comfort of knowing that the points will make a transformative difference either way.

I am not rushing to the market on this one. The odds reflect a close contest and they are probably right to do so. But if I were asked where the balance of probability lies, I would point to the home side, to the quality they have shown in patches across the season, and to the intelligence that comes from familiarity with your own pitch, your own crowd, your own routines on a match day. Sometimes that is enough.

Final Odds Snapshot

St. Mirren to win: 2.00 (Unibet). Both teams to score, yes: 1.56 (Unibet), 1.67 (William Hill), 1.75 (bet365). Both teams to score, no: 2.25 (Unibet), 2.05 (William Hill), 2.00 (bet365). Correct score 1-1: 6.10 (Unibet), 6.00 (William Hill). Correct score 2-1 to St. Mirren: 7.00 (Unibet), 8.00 (William Hill).

Bet Builder TipModel confidence: MediumModel edgeEdge +0.2%

Three-leg same-game pick

This combination targets St. Mirren's clear superiority at home against a Kilmarnock side that has conceded heavily and inconsistently throughout the season, with an expectant home crowd and final-week momentum likely to produce an early goal and dominant performance. The three legs together capture a fixture where St. Mirren's defensive solidity and attacking commitment clash favourably against Kilmarnock's well-documented vulnerabilities in both boxes.

Illustrative return on £10
£35.60

Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Model win probability
28%

Modelled estimate. Actual outcomes vary.

Model edge vs market
+0.0%

Model probability minus market-implied probability.

  1. 1Draw No Bet

    St. Mirren (Draw No Bet)

    St. Mirren's sixth-place finish with 49 points from 35 matches reflects a competitive side capable of imposing itself at home, whilst Kilmarnock's precarious position with 43 points and a concerning 57 goals conceded suggests they lack the defensive stability to trouble this fixture. The hosts have shown consistent intent with 47 goals scored and a relatively balanced record, positioning them as clear favourites in a match where a final-week display could shape supporter sentiment for the summer.

    1.34 - 1.40
    Model75%
    Market71%+4.0% edge
  2. 2Goals in 1st Half

    Over 0.5 Goals in 1st Half

    St. Mirren have demonstrated they are a team willing to commit to the contest with genuine attacking intent throughout their season, creating chances and engaging in matches rather than retreating defensively. Kilmarnock's vulnerability, evidenced by their 12 defeats from 35 games and repeated inability to maintain defensive discipline, suggests they will be exposed early in a fixture where St. Mirren can establish control from the opening stages.

    1.26 - 1.33
    Model73%
    Market76%-2.8% edge
  3. 3Both Teams to Score

    Both Teams to Score - No

    Kilmarnock's record of 57 goals conceded across 35 matches represents a fundamental defensive fragility that has undermined their entire campaign, whilst St. Mirren's 51 goals conceded indicates tighter rearguard organisation despite their mid-table position. With the hosts likely to dominate possession and territory at Paisley, Kilmarnock's poor goal difference of minus nine and inconsistent attacking output of 48 goals suggests they may struggle to find the back of the net against a team playing with purpose in a meaningful final fixture.

    2.02 - 2.25
    Model51%
    Market48%+3.7% edge

Why these three legs fit together

This combination targets St. Mirren's clear superiority at home against a Kilmarnock side that has conceded heavily and inconsistently throughout the season, with an expectant home crowd and final-week momentum likely to produce an early goal and dominant performance. The three legs together capture a fixture where St. Mirren's defensive solidity and attacking commitment clash favourably against Kilmarnock's well-documented vulnerabilities in both boxes.

18+. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Combined prices shown are estimates and will differ from the final price offered. Selections are subject to availability at your chosen bookmaker. Please gamble responsibly. Free, confidential support is available at GambleAware.

Related: Form: St. Mirren · Form: Kilmarnock · Head-to-head: St. Mirren vs Kilmarnock

Match data, form summaries, and head-to-head records are sourced from SportSignals’ proprietary AI analysis engine.

Frequently Asked Questions

What time does St. Mirren vs Kilmarnock kick off on 9 May 2026?

St. Mirren vs Kilmarnock kicks off at 14:00 UTC on Saturday 9 May 2026, which is 3pm local time in Scotland.

What is the recommended bet for St. Mirren vs Kilmarnock?

The signal on this match is St. Mirren to win at odds of 2.00 with Unibet. The model assigns a 54 per cent probability to a home victory, providing a modest but positive edge over the implied market probability of 50 per cent.

Where do St. Mirren and Kilmarnock sit in the Scottish Premiership table heading into this match?

Going into the match, St. Mirren are sixth in the Scottish Premiership with 49 points from 35 games. Kilmarnock are positioned just below them with 43 points from the same number of matches, having won ten, drawn thirteen and lost twelve across the season.

St. Mirren crestKilmarnock crest

Bet Builder Tip

St. Mirren vs Kilmarnock

Model edgeMedium confidenceEdge +0.2%
Combined
3.56
Model win prob.
28%
  1. 1Draw No Bet1.34 - 1.40

    St. Mirren (Draw No Bet)

    Model75%
    Market71%+4.0% edge
  2. 2Goals in 1st Half1.26 - 1.33

    Over 0.5 Goals in 1st Half

    Model73%
    Market76%-2.8% edge
  3. 3Both Teams to Score2.02 - 2.25

    Both Teams to Score - No

    Model51%
    Market48%+3.7% edge
Read the full tip analysis →

18+. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Predictions are for informational purposes only and do not constitute betting advice. Please gamble responsibly. GambleAware.