Adelaide United and Auckland FC meet again in the A-League Men playoffs on Friday afternoon, 15 May 2026, with the second leg carrying all the usual knockout tension. The first meeting in Auckland finished 1-1, so neither side has a cushion and neither side can afford a slow start. It’s winner-takes-advantage territory now. One goal changes everything.
For Adelaide United, this is a chance to keep a long unbeaten run alive and reach the next phase with some authority. For Auckland FC, it’s about shaking off a six-match wait for a win and proving they can handle the pressure of a tie that’s balanced on a knife edge. The aggregate is level, the margins are tiny, and the numbers from the first leg point to another close game.
There’s also a familiar feel to this meeting. These two have already traded some lively, open contests this season, and neither defence has managed to shut the other out in any of the last five head-to-heads. That matters. Knockout football can get cagey, but these sides haven’t really played that way against one another. You’d expect chances again.
Adelaide United Form & Analysis
Adelaide United come into this return leg with a strong sense of resilience. Their last six matches tell a pretty clear story: a 2-4 win at Western Sydney Wanderers, a 1-1 draw away to Newcastle Jets, a 3-1 home win over Macarthur FC, then a 2-1 away win at Melbourne City, followed by the first-leg 1-1 draw in Auckland. That’s a run built on staying in games and punishing mistakes. They haven’t gone overboard with control, but they’ve kept finding a way to land punches.
The most recent meeting with Auckland FC on 9 May summed them up neatly. Adelaide went behind in possession terms, but not in belief. They drew 1-1 away from home, with Lachlan Brook striking in the 24th minute before Harry Crawford’s goal after the break kept them level. The underlying numbers were decent too: Adelaide posted 1.34 xG and allowed 0.85, and they created four big chances to Auckland’s one. That’s the kind of return that gives you confidence going into a home leg. They didn’t dominate the ball, but they were the sharper attacking side when it mattered.
At home this season, Adelaide have been solid rather than flawless: six wins, four draws and three losses, with 24 goals scored and 18 conceded. That’s a decent record, and it fits the broader picture. They’ve now gone 11 matches unbeaten since their last defeat, which came against Newcastle Jets back in February. That’s not a fluke. It points to a side that’s difficult to beat even when they’re not at their sparkling best. Mind you, they’ve also made a habit of allowing the opposition chances, so this isn’t some locked-down defensive machine. Adelaide are far more likely to trade blows than sit on a lead.
The one thing that really stands out is how consistently they’ve scored. Adelaide have found the net in 9 of their last 9 matches, and that sort of run changes the mood around a knockout tie. They don’t need many invitations. Give them space, and they’ll take it.
Auckland FC Form & Analysis
Auckland FC’s recent form is much less convincing. Their last six have brought two draws with Adelaide, two more draws against Melbourne Victory and Melbourne City, and defeats to Central Coast Mariners and Macarthur FC. It’s a sequence that says plenty: hard to beat in the sense that they’re not getting blown away, but not quite sharp enough to turn control into wins. Six games without victory is a problem at this stage of the season. There’s no glossing over that.
The first leg will have frustrated Steve Corica and his side. Auckland had more shots than Adelaide in the 1-1 draw, 18 to 12, and matched them on target at five apiece, but they only managed 0.85 xG. That tells its own story. They had territory and volume without much bite. Adelaide, by contrast, were cleaner in the key moments and created the better chances. Auckland didn’t collapse, though, and that’s why this tie is still very much alive.
At home this season they’ve been reliable enough, with seven wins, five draws and one loss, conceding just 13 goals on their own ground. Away from home, though, the picture is thinner. Auckland have scored only 13 goals on the road, and that lack of cutting edge has started to drag. Can they find a way to be more ruthless in a playoff tie? That’s the question. Their defensive structure has usually kept them competitive, but you can’t lean on that forever if the attack keeps coming up short.
They’ve also become a side that tends to get into shared-score games. Both teams have scored in 8 of Auckland’s last 9 matches, which is no coincidence when you look at how often they’re involved in open, back-and-forth contests. Still, the winless run hangs over them. A draw in the first leg was acceptable. Another one here, and they’re gambling on narrow margins again.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been friendly to attacking football and stubbornly unkind to clean sheets. The two 1-1 draws this season fit a wider pattern: Auckland beat Adelaide 2-1 in November, but before that there was a wild 4-4 draw in March 2025 and a 2-2 draw in January 2025. Five meetings in a row have seen both teams score. That’s not a random quirk. It’s the shape of the matchup.
Auckland also carry the better recent edge in the one sense that matters psychologically: they’ve lost none of the last five meetings. Adelaide have still managed to score in every one of those games, though, and that’s why this tie feels so balanced. There’s no sign of either side blanking the other out. Not even close.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 1/2 for this playoff second leg. It’s short enough, yes, but it still looks the right call. Adelaide have scored in nine straight matches and have found a way to land a goal in every one of the last five against Auckland. The visitors have also seen both teams score in 8 of their last 9, and the first leg again produced goals at both ends. That pattern is hard to ignore.
There’s no need to overcomplicate it. These teams don’t really play dull games against each other, and with the tie level at 1-1, both managers know that sitting back too early would be a mistake. A 1-1 draw wouldn’t shock anyone, but the more natural read is a 1-1 or 2-1 sort of contest. We’ll land on 1-2 to Auckland as the scoreline call, mainly because Corica’s side have enough structure to nick it if Adelaide leave even small gaps. The safer angle, though, is BTTS. That’s the play.
If you wanted a slightly bigger-priced alternative, over 2.5 goals has a decent shout too. These meetings keep opening up, and neither defence has given any real sign of shutting the door completely.