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Drogheda United host Sligo Rovers in the Premier Division on Friday evening, 1 May 2026, with both sides looking to push away from the lower reaches of the table and build a bit of breathing room. It’s not glamorous, but it matters. Drogheda sit 9th on 13 points, while Sligo are just a point better off in 7th, and with the season still young enough for momentum to matter, this feels like one of those nights where a win can change the mood around a club very quickly.
There’s a little more spice here than the league positions suggest. Drogheda arrive off a wild 4-3 win at Shelbourne, a result that dragged them out of a sticky patch and reminded everyone they can hurt teams when the game opens up. Sligo, though, are travelling with a bit more confidence after three wins from their last four league matches and a clean 2-0 victory over Dundalk on 25 April. One side has started to find chaos in attack. The other has started to look more stable. That tension is what makes this one worth watching.
Drogheda’s recent run has been all over the place, and that’s putting it politely. They went into mid-April looking short on control, drawing 0-0 with Shamrock Rovers, then being held 2-2 at Derry City, before frustrating themselves again in a 0-0 at home to Bohemians. The warning signs were there. They then lost 3-2 at home to Galway United and 3-1 to St. Patrick’s Athletic, so the mood around the club was hardly bright. Then came that trip to Shelbourne on 24 April, and suddenly the picture looked very different. Drogheda won 4-3 in a game that turned into a shootout, with Sean Boyd, Paddy Barrett, Edwin Agbaje, Warren Davis twice, Harry Wood from the penalty spot and Conor Keeley all on the scoresheet. Seven goals. No hiding place.
That was the kind of match that says plenty about this Drogheda side. They’re capable of causing damage, especially when the game becomes stretched, but they’re also giving opponents too many looks at goal. The numbers from the Shelbourne win were messy in the extreme — 1.04 xG for Drogheda against 2.67 xGA — which tells you they weren’t exactly in control for most of the evening. They won anyway. Fine. But you wouldn’t want to rely on that every week. The back line has now gone four straight games without a clean sheet, and the home crowd has seen plenty of goals at both ends rather than any real security.
At home, Drogheda’s record is modest: one win, two draws and three defeats, with six scored and eight conceded. That’s the sort of home return that leaves little margin for error. They’re not being blown away in every game, but they’re not imposing themselves either. You can usually expect them to get a few chances, especially with the attacking fluency they showed against Shelbourne, yet the defensive side is still a concern. If this becomes a half-open contest again, you’d fancy them to contribute. Keep it tight? That’s a different story.
Sligo’s recent run has a much cleaner shape to it. They’ve won three of their last four league matches, and the momentum is real. It started with a 1-2 away win at Bohemians on 10 April, a result that probably did more for belief than any home victory could have. They followed it with a gritty 0-0 draw at home to Derry City, then suffered a 4-1 defeat at St. Patrick’s Athletic. That one was ugly. But they’ve responded well, beating Waterford 2-0 and then Dundalk 2-0 at home in successive games. No fuss. No drama. Just six points and two clean sheets.
The Dundalk win was especially encouraging because it came with authority. Sligo posted 2.85 xG to Dundalk’s 2.13, which shows they weren’t just hanging on — they created enough to justify the result and then some. William Fitzgerald opened the scoring in the 12th minute, Cian Kavanagh added the second after the break, and John Russell’s side saw the game out properly. That matters here. Sligo have also gone four matches unbeaten since the defeat at St. Patrick’s Athletic, and that’s the sort of run that can steady a season quickly.
The away record is still the shakier part of the picture. Sligo are 9th in the away table with one win, one draw and four defeats, and they’ve managed only four goals on the road while conceding nine. That’s not the record of a side you’d trust blindly outside Sligo. Still, there’s enough about their current run to say they won’t arrive in fear. They’ve found a bit more structure, and they’re showing they can score away from home too — as they did at Bohemians. Can they keep it tidy in Drogheda? That’s the question. Because if they can’t, this game gets messy fast.
These two have history, and it’s been lively. The most recent meeting came on 7 March 2026, when Sligo Rovers beat Drogheda United 2-1 at home. Before that, the sides drew 1-1 in Sligo in September 2025, while Drogheda won 1-0 at home in June 2025. Go back a little further and you find another draw in May 2025, a 3-0 Drogheda home win in February 2025, and that unforgettable 7-0 demolition by Drogheda at home in August 2024.
What stands out is that these games rarely stay contained. Seven of the last nine meetings have gone over 2.5 goals, and Sligo have failed to keep a clean sheet in nine straight head-to-head matches. That’s a pretty useful angle for this fixture. Neither side seems especially comfortable shutting the other down for long.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 here, and it looks a strong shout. Drogheda have scored in each of their last three league matches, while Sligo have found the net in four of their last five. More to the point, neither defence looks reliable enough to be trusted for 90 minutes. Drogheda have gone four without a clean sheet, Sligo have been leaky away from home, and the recent head-to-head record points in the same direction. This one should have chances at both ends.
A 1-1 draw feels the likeliest scoreline. Drogheda’s home form isn’t strong enough to make them a comfortable favourite, but their recent attacking output means they’re unlikely to be blanked. Sligo’s improved run gives them a real chance of nicking something too, even if their away record stops short of inspiring total confidence. If you wanted a livelier alternative, over 2.5 goals has plenty of appeal given the history between these sides — but BTTS is the cleaner play.
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