FC St. Pauli host VfL Wolfsburg at the Millerntor on Saturday afternoon in a Bundesliga meeting that carries far more weight than a routine late-season fixture. Both clubs are stuck on 26 points, with St. Pauli sitting 18th and Wolfsburg 16th, so this is squarely in the survival scrap. One win won’t solve everything, but it would draw a little oxygen into a crowded relegation fight. Lose it, and the pressure gets ugly very quickly.
For Alexander Blessin’s St. Pauli, the picture is fairly stark. They’ve gone nine league games without a win and haven’t kept a clean sheet in eight, which is not the sort of platform you want when the table is this tight. Wolfsburg aren’t exactly flying either, but Dieter Hecking’s side at least have a little more attacking output and a slightly better away record to lean on. Both teams know this is the kind of match that can shape the final week or two of the season. Small margins. No room for passengers.
The reverse fixture in January went Wolfsburg’s way by 2-1, and that result fits the broader pattern in this rivalry: tight games, goals at both ends, and very little to separate them. Even so, neither side is arriving in especially convincing fashion. The numbers are messy, the confidence looks fragile, and the stakes are high enough to make this one tense rather than pretty.
FC St. Pauli Form & Analysis
St. Pauli’s recent run has been grim. Their last six Bundesliga matches have brought just one point, and even that came in a draw. They lost 2-1 away to RB Leipzig on 9 May after a match that briefly felt alive when Abdoulie Ceesay pulled one back late on, but by then Leipzig had already established control through Xaver Schlager and Willi Orbán. Before that came a 2-1 home defeat to Mainz, another frustrating afternoon where they were competitive without being sharp enough.
The pattern doesn’t stop there. A 2-0 loss at Heidenheim, a 1-1 draw at home to Köln, the 5-0 hammering by Bayern, and another 1-1 away at Union Berlin paint a very clear picture. St. Pauli have been in games, but they haven’t been finishing them properly. That Bayern defeat still looms large because it showed the gap to the division’s top end, yet the more worrying detail is how often they’re conceding first and then having to chase. It leaves them exposed. It also drains belief.
At home this season, St. Pauli’s record is modest rather than disastrous: four wins, five draws and seven losses, with 16 scored and 28 conceded. That’s a weak return at the Millerntor, and it’s hard to dress it up any differently. They’ve taken points there against Köln and, earlier in the campaign, held Union, but the bigger home nights have tended to go against them. You can see why the market keeps coming back to goals against them and why a clean sheet feels a long way off. They’ve conceded in eight straight league matches, and that run is the kind of thing that hangs around a team.
Still, St. Pauli aren’t completely toothless. They’ve scored in four of their last six, and the xG numbers from the Leipzig game — 0.79 for, 1.37 against — were at least consistent with a side that creates enough to nick one but rarely enough to dominate. The problem is obvious: their margins are tiny, and when their defensive line slips, they don’t have the cushion to absorb it. That’s a bad combination when you’re fighting the drop.
VfL Wolfsburg Form & Analysis
Wolfsburg’s recent form is only a shade better, which says plenty about where they are. They lost 1-0 at home to Bayern on 9 May, and the raw scoreline doesn’t even fully explain the frustration. They posted 3.04 xG and had four big chances in that match, but still came away empty-handed. That was the story against Bayern: chances created, result not taken. It’s the sort of performance that leaves a manager with mixed feelings. Encouraging, yes. Useful, not really.
Before that, there was a 1-1 draw at Freiburg, a dull goalless home draw with Gladbach, and a 2-1 win away at Union Berlin, which remains their last victory. Between those games came a 2-1 home defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt and a wild 6-3 loss at Leverkusen. You could almost argue Wolfsburg have had every kind of result in a short space of time. They’ve been open, erratic and vulnerable, but also capable of creating enough to trouble teams away from home. They just haven’t strung anything together.
Their away record is better than St. Pauli’s home numbers and that matters here. Four wins, four draws and eight defeats, with 21 scored and 36 conceded on the road, is hardly elite, but it’s enough to suggest they’re not hopeless away from home. The scoring return stands out. Twenty-one away goals is a decent attacking base, especially for a side sitting down in 16th. They don’t keep many clean sheets — in fact, they’ve drawn blanks in two of their last three — but they usually find a way to create something. That keeps them alive in this sort of fixture.
Hecking’s side also come in with a useful bit of away resilience against middling opponents. The win at Union wasn’t flashy, yet it showed they can still play with some discipline when the game asks for it. The bigger issue is the back line. Wolfsburg have conceded 68 league goals overall, and that’s an alarming total. They won’t need telling that at St. Pauli they can’t afford the sort of defensive mess that turned the Leverkusen trip into a shootout they lost badly. If they do their usual thing and score once, they’ll still be right in the game. If they give away cheap chances, they’ll make life harder than it needs to be.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been remarkably even over the years, and the recent meetings back that up. Wolfsburg beat St. Pauli 2-1 in January, but before that there was a 1-1 draw in March 2025 and a goalless draw in Hamburg in October 2024. That’s three straight Bundesliga meetings without a runaway result. Tight, stubborn, and usually competitive.
The longer trend points the same way. Wolfsburg are unbeaten in six against St. Pauli, and seven of the last eight meetings have seen both teams score. That’s the one H2H angle that matters most here. It fits the current shape of both sides, too. Neither defence inspires much trust, and both attacks have just enough about them to find a way through.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 2/5 is the pick here. Wolfsburg don’t look polished, but they do look a fraction steadier than St. Pauli, and that edge should be enough to protect them against defeat in a game between two struggling sides. The away team have the better attacking output on the road, St. Pauli have gone nine league matches without a win, and the recent head-to-head trend leans Wolfsburg’s way. Simple enough.
A draw feels the most natural outcome, and 1-1 is the correct scoreline to lean into. St. Pauli have been drawing enough matches to show they can stay in the fight, while Wolfsburg’s recent pattern suggests they’re always good for a chance or two, even when they’re not winning. If you want a slightly bolder angle, both teams to score has plenty of appeal given the H2H record and the defensive flaws on both sides. But the safer call is X2. Wolfsburg not to lose.