Coventry City welcome Wrexham to the CBS Arena on Sunday afternoon in a Championship meeting that matters at both ends of the table. Frank Lampard’s side are top of the division and closing in on the title, while Phil Parkinson’s Wrexham arrive in sixth place with the play-off race still very much alive. For Coventry, this is about finishing the job after a superb season. For Wrexham, it’s about proving they belong in the promotion conversation and taking something from one of the division’s best teams.
There’s plenty of narrative weight here too. Coventry have been relentless at home, and after a 5-1 hammering of Portsmouth last time out, they’ll fancy another big afternoon in front of their own fans. Wrexham, though, are no passengers. Their away form has kept them in the hunt, and a 1-0 win at Oxford United on 21 April showed they can still grind out results when the game gets tight. That’s the sort of away win that keeps a season breathing.
This one has a proper end-of-season edge. Coventry are trying to protect first place with 89 points, 90 goals scored and the best defensive record in the league at 44 conceded. Wrexham sit on 70 points and still need every scrap they can get to hold off the chasing pack. The stakes are clear. One side wants a title finish. The other wants the play-offs. Nobody can afford a lazy afternoon.
Coventry City Form & Analysis
Coventry are coming into this on a six-game unbeaten run, and the shape of that run tells you plenty. It started with a brilliant 3-0 win at Swansea City on 21 March, then came the edge-of-the-seat stuff: a 3-2 home win over Derby County, followed by three straight draws against Hull City, Sheffield Wednesday and Blackburn Rovers. That isn’t a team stumbling around. It’s a team that finds ways to keep moving when the game gets awkward. Then Portsmouth arrived at the CBS Arena and got torn apart 5-1. That was the statement performance. The kind that tells everyone they’re not just top by accident.
At home, Coventry have been outstanding. Sixteen wins, four draws and only two defeats from 22 league matches is promotion form, title form, all of it. They’ve scored 48 times at home and only conceded 18, which is the sort of record that forces visitors to start nervously and usually finish that way too. There’s no soft underbelly here. Lampard’s team are balanced, aggressive and efficient in both boxes. They’ve also now gone six without defeat overall, and that unbeaten stretch has been built on control. Even the goalless draws against Hull and Sheffield Wednesday had a sense of stubbornness rather than drift.
The Portsmouth game summed them up neatly. They didn’t just win, they overwhelmed. Haji Wright struck early, Ephron Mason-Clark got in on the act twice, the pressure forced an own goal, and the late finish was polished off by Kaine Kesler-Hayden. That was a proper front-foot display. Coventry’s home attack has been fearsome all season, and with 90 league goals overall they’ve got the firepower to hurt anyone. Still, the two recent home draws show they’re not immune to the occasional frustrating night. If Wrexham stay compact and deny space in the middle, there’s a route into this game. But it won’t be easy.
Wrexham Form & Analysis
Wrexham’s recent run has been a mix of resilience and volatility, which is pretty much what you’d expect from a side still settling into the Championship grind. Their last six have included wins over Sheffield United, West Bromwich Albion and Stoke City, plus that massive 1-0 success at Oxford United on Tuesday. There were also the bumps: a 2-2 draw at West Brom, a 1-5 home beating by Southampton, and a 0-2 loss at Birmingham City. That Southampton game was ugly. No way around it. Yet they’ve bounced back twice since then, and that matters.
Away from home, Parkinson’s side have been competitive. Nine wins, seven draws and six defeats on the road is a strong return, especially for a team sitting in the play-off spots. They’ve scored 27 away goals and conceded 25, which says the away matches are rarely boring but not always secure either. Wrexham can travel, though not always with the same authority they show at home. Their away record is built on enough control and enough bite to stay in games. The 1-0 at Oxford was a good example: not dominant in shots, but efficient when it mattered. Josh Windass took his chance, and that was that.
The concern is the defensive ceiling. Conceding 60 goals across the season and 25 away from home leaves them vulnerable when the opposition starts moving the ball quickly. Coventry do that better than most. Wrexham have also tended to concede first in a fair few away matches, and that’s not ideal when you’re heading into a stadium where the hosts have won 16 of 22. Still, Wrexham aren’t a side that folds just because the odds are against them. They’ve nicked big wins on the road, and if they can keep this level compact early on, they’ve got enough to make Coventry work for it.
One thing stands out: they’ve got enough attacking quality to threaten. Sixty-six goals in the league isn’t a fluke, and Windass has added a bit of sharpness at the right time. The problem is consistency. Wrexham can look very good for 45 minutes, then too open for the next 20. Against Coventry, that kind of swing usually gets punished.
Head-to-Head
The meetings between these two have produced goals and late drama. Wrexham beat Coventry 3-2 at home on 31 October 2025 in their most recent league meeting, and the pair also met in the FA Cup back in January 2023, when Wrexham edged a wild one 4-3 at Coventry. That’s not a rivalry full of decades of history, but the recent pattern is clear enough: these sides can create plenty when they meet.
That doesn’t automatically mean another seven-goal classic is coming, but it does tell you neither defence can assume safety just because they’re in form. Coventry are much tighter now than they were in that FA Cup tie, and Wrexham have had their own share of defensive wobble this season. Even so, if one side opens the game up, the other usually finds a route in. Goals haven’t exactly been rare in this fixture.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
Over 2.5 Goals at 8/11 looks the sharp play here. Coventry have been scoring freely at home all season, and after putting five past Portsmouth they’ll feel they can break Wrexham down again. Wrexham aren’t built to sit in and survive for 90 minutes without coming out to play at some point. Their away record is solid enough to suggest they’ll land a punch of their own. That’s the key. Both teams have enough going forward to drag this over the line.
The 2-1 Coventry scoreline feels right. Lampard’s side have the stronger structure, the stronger home record and the better defensive base, so they should edge it. But Wrexham have enough attacking threat to keep things honest, and this doesn’t look like a cagey 1-0. If you wanted a small alternative, Coventry to win and over 2.5 goals is the angle that fits the mood of the game best.