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Charlton Athletic welcome Ipswich Town to The Valley on Wednesday evening, 22 April 2026, in a Championship meeting that pulls in both ends of the table. Charlton are grinding through the closing weeks from 19th place, still looking over their shoulder after a difficult campaign, while Ipswich arrive in second and chasing the sort of finish that can turn promotion pressure into real momentum. One side needs breathing space. The other needs points, plain and simple.
For Charlton, this is about stopping the slide and finding a bit of dignity in the run-in. They’re six without a win and have spent much of the spring picking up single points rather than turning performances into victories. Ipswich come with far more to play for at the top end. Kieran McKenna’s side are firmly in the promotion picture, and every game now feels like a test of nerve as much as quality. That won’t be lost on them.
There’s also a bit of history to chew on. These clubs met earlier in the season at Portman Road, when Charlton produced a sharp 3-0 win in the Championship in October. Ipswich have had their own stronger days in this matchup too, including some heavy wins in the League One years, so there’s no shortage of familiar bite here. Still, the current league table tells you plenty. Charlton need a lifeline. Ipswich need to keep their foot down.
Charlton’s recent story is a familiar one: hard to beat for spells, but not ruthless enough to kill games. Their last six league matches have brought a string of draws and losses, with the latest a 1-1 away at Sheffield Wednesday on 18 April. That was a cleaner attacking display than some of the other recent outings, with Matt Godden striking in the 49th minute and Charlton generally looking more organised than they had in the home defeat to Preston North End a week earlier. But a decent away point doesn’t erase the bigger picture. They’ve gone six league games without a win, and that’s the sort of run that drags a season down fast.
Before that trip to Hillsborough, they were beaten 2-1 at home by Preston, lost 2-1 to Bristol City at The Valley, and went down 1-0 at home to Norwich City. Sandwiched in between were draws at Watford and Oxford United. It’s not a collapse, exactly. It’s worse than that. It’s a slow bleed. Charlton keep competing, keep finding enough to stay in games, then let the result slip away. That’s what happens when a side lacks cutting edge. One goal often isn’t enough. Sometimes it isn’t even close.
At home, the numbers are slightly kinder, though not by much. Charlton’s home record stands at eight wins, four draws and nine losses, with 20 goals scored and 23 conceded at The Valley. That’s a decent enough platform on paper, but not one that screams control. They’re averaging just under a goal per home game, and the margin between scoreline and survival has been thin all year. The good news is that they usually keep it competitive. The bad news? They don’t finish teams off, and when the match turns messy, they’ve not had the defensive steel to make up for it.
There is, though, one thing Charlton have done consistently: they’ve been involved in tight, low-margin games. Their home scoring rate is modest and their defensive returns are patchy, which is why so many of their matches end up drifting towards the middle ground. Nathan Jones will want more aggression and more end product here, but this is still a side that leans toward caution rather than chaos. That won’t necessarily suit them against a team pushing for promotion. Ipswich will smell the gaps.
Ipswich arrive in much better shape, even if the last couple of weeks have taken a little shine off things. Their most recent outing was a 2-2 home draw with Middlesbrough on 19 April, a match that exposed a defence they’d rather keep out of the frame. Ipswich scored twice through David Strelec and Kasey McAteer, but they also allowed Middlesbrough far too much joy in the final third. The xG line was ugly too: 1.24 for Ipswich against 2.68 for the visitors. That’s not the sort of home performance promotion hopefuls want to turn in. It was open, too open.
Still, the broader run has been strong enough to keep them near the summit. Before the Middlesbrough draw, they lost 2-0 at Portsmouth, then beat Norwich City 2-0 away, beat Birmingham City 2-1 at home, drew 1-1 with Millwall, and beat Sheffield Wednesday 2-0 away. That’s a proper promotion sequence in the middle of the run-in: road wins, home control, enough variety to keep the points coming. The Portsmouth defeat stands out because it interrupted their momentum, but it hasn’t shaken the whole picture. Ipswich are still second for a reason.
Away from home, Kieran McKenna’s side have been productive. Their away record reads eight wins, five draws and seven losses, with 33 goals scored and 27 conceded. That’s not a perfect travelling record, and the defeats show they’ve been caught out a few times, but the attacking output is the key number. Thirty-three away goals is strong. It tells you they don’t travel timidly, and they usually carry enough quality to create chances even when the game state gets awkward. They’ve also won at Norwich and Sheffield Wednesday in recent weeks, which matters. Those are not the signs of a side shrinking under pressure.
The flip side is that Ipswich aren’t as watertight as the league position might suggest. Their 44 goals conceded overall is respectable, yet the Middlesbrough game was a reminder that if the midfield line gets bypassed and the back four are forced into extended defensive phases, they can be exposed. That gives Charlton a shred of hope. A shred. Ipswich still have the better squad balance, the better league position and more reliable attacking numbers. But they’re not clean enough to be treated like a lock.
There’s enough history here to stop anyone getting too comfortable. The most recent meeting between the sides came in October 2025, when Charlton went to Portman Road and won 3-0 in the Championship. That result sticks out like a sore thumb compared with the rest of the recent sequence, because Ipswich had dominated some earlier home meetings and even crushed Charlton 6-0 in League One back in April 2023. These teams have produced a few strange scorelines over the years. No shortage of them, actually.
The pattern across the broader head-to-head is clear enough: goals tend to be part of the picture. Recent meetings have often opened up, and the 4-4 draw at The Valley in 2022 is the kind of reminder that this fixture can go off the rails if either side loses structure. Ipswich’s current league position makes them the stronger side on paper, but Charlton have already shown they can land a punch in this matchup. That 3-0 away win wasn’t an accident.
Double Chance X2 at 1/6 is the pick here, and it’s hard to argue with it. Ipswich are the better side, they’re still pushing near the top, and their away record is solid enough to cover a tricky trip. Charlton are six games without a win and haven’t kept a clean sheet in that stretch. That’s a poor base to build an upset on, even at home.
The main reason this lands is simple: Ipswich don’t need to be brilliant to avoid defeat, and Charlton haven’t shown the attacking punch to punish stronger teams for 90 minutes. The 1-1 scoreline feels live, which fits the xG projection of 1.3 to 1.1 and Charlton’s habit of hanging around in games. Still, the safer read is that Ipswich don’t lose. A 1-1 draw looks the most natural exact score, though a narrow away win wouldn’t surprise anyone either. If you want a slightly bolder angle, both teams to score has a decent case too, given Charlton’s recent scoring in dribs and drabs and Ipswich’s looseness at the back against Middlesbrough.
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