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Fulham host Bournemouth at Craven Cottage on Saturday evening, 9 May 2026, with both sides still playing for plenty as the Premier League season runs down. Marco Silva’s team sit 11th on 48 points, which is respectable enough, but they’re not quite safe from the pack behind them and they’ll want to finish strongly in front of their own supporters. Bournemouth arrive in 6th on 52 points, right in the thick of the race for European qualification. That’s the prize. For Andoni Iraola’s side, every point feels bigger now.
It’s also a meeting between two teams who’ve spent much of the campaign looking more comfortable in attacking games than in cagey ones. Fulham’s home record has been a genuine base for Silva, while Bournemouth’s season has been built on persistence and a habit of keeping themselves in matches. The margins are fine. Very fine. And that’s exactly why this one feels like a draw-or-home-leaning affair rather than a straightforward away win.
There’s a bit of recent narrative baked in too. Fulham were cut open at Arsenal last time out, losing 3-0 on 2 May, and the xG was ugly at 0.37 to 3.23. Bournemouth, by contrast, went into the weekend off the back of a sharp 3-0 win over Crystal Palace, a result that kept their momentum rolling and stretched an eye-catching unbeaten run. That contrast matters. One team looked flat, the other looked ruthless.
Fulham’s last six have been a mixed bag, and that’s putting it politely. They beat Aston Villa 1-0 at home on 25 April, which was the sort of tidy, disciplined win Silva loves, but they’ve sandwiched that with a 3-0 defeat at Arsenal, a goalless draw at Brentford, a 2-0 loss at Liverpool, a 3-1 home win over Burnley and another 0-0 away at Nottingham Forest. There’s a pattern there. They’ve been hard to beat at Craven Cottage, yet on the road they’ve often looked short of threat. The Arsenal game was the latest example: one shot on target, one big chance, and barely a foothold.
At home, though, the picture is sturdier. Fulham’s league record at Craven Cottage reads 10 wins, 2 draws and 5 defeats, with 28 goals scored and 19 conceded. That’s a strong return and it explains why they’ve got enough points on the board to sit mid-table with some comfort. They’ve won more often than not in west London, and they don’t usually give visitors an easy ride. Still, this isn’t a side lighting it up at both ends. Their overall total of 44 goals from 35 league matches is modest, and the numbers at home suggest control rather than chaos.
That’s why the expected shape of this game matters. Fulham can keep it compact and make it awkward, especially if they get the first goal. But they’ve also gone without scoring in two of their last six, and that’s the concern. Can they find enough quality against a Bournemouth side that’s been stubborn all season? That’s the question. Silva will trust the home platform, but he’ll know his team need a cleaner attacking edge than they produced at the Emirates.
Bournemouth come into this one in a far healthier state. Their most recent outing was the 3-0 home win over Crystal Palace on 3 May, and it looked every bit the statement victory. They didn’t just win; they controlled it. Before that, they drew 2-2 with Leeds United at home, beat Newcastle United 2-1 away on 18 April and stunned Arsenal 2-1 away a week earlier. Go back a little further and there were draws with Manchester United and Burnley too. That’s an impressive sequence. They’ve barely taken a backward step.
The away record is decent rather than dazzling, but still very much usable. Bournemouth have 5 wins, 7 draws and 5 defeats on the road, with 27 goals scored and 33 conceded. That tells you two things. They can score away from home, and they’re rarely shy about getting on the front foot, but they do leave space behind them. It’s a slightly messy profile. Not a bad one, though. In fact, for a team sitting sixth, it’s the sort of balance that keeps them competitive every week.
Iraola’s side are also arriving with a remarkable unbeaten run behind them. They haven’t lost in 16 matches in all competitions, and in league terms they’ve been almost impossible to pin down. That sort of streak changes the psychology of a fixture. Bournemouth no longer travel looking for damage limitation; they expect to impose themselves. They’ve scored in bunches, they’ve found ways to respond when under pressure, and they’ve been carrying enough attacking threat to make most opponents nervous. The only caveat is that their away defence still gives up chances. Fulham won’t need much encouragement.
This fixture has produced goals and a few uneasy afternoons for Fulham. Bournemouth beat them 3-1 in Dorset on 3 October 2025 and followed that with a 1-0 win at home in April 2025. Before that, there was a 2-2 draw at Craven Cottage in December 2024 and a 3-1 Fulham win in February 2024. Go back further and Bournemouth had the better of it again, winning 3-0 in December 2023 and 2-1 in April 2023.
The general pattern is clear enough: Bournemouth have been awkward opponents, and this fixture has tended to open up. Seven of the last nine meetings have featured both teams scoring, and six of the last seven have gone over 2.5 goals. That doesn’t guarantee another lively one, of course, but it does fit the way both clubs are playing now.
Double Chance 1X at 8/15 looks the strongest play here. Our accumulator betting guide is a useful companion here because it breaks down accumulator betting including how to build combos without padding the slip. Fulham’s home record is too solid to ignore, and while Bournemouth are in far better overall form, this is still a game where the Cottage can drag things toward a draw. Bournemouth have been excellent for long stretches, yet their away record isn’t intimidating enough to make them a confident straight away pick.
The 1-1 correct score feels the likeliest outcome. Fulham should contribute enough at home to avoid being blanked, and Bournemouth have scored in nine of their last ten league matches. At the same time, Iraola’s side have drawn plenty of games this season and Fulham’s defensive shape at home usually keeps things from drifting too far. One alternative is Both Teams To Score, which fits the recent meeting pattern and the attacking profiles of both sides, but the safer angle is 1X. That’s the one.
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