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Ipswich Town welcome Queens Park Rangers to Portman Road on Saturday afternoon in the Championship, and the timing feels significant for both clubs. Ipswich are chasing the season’s big prize: promotion. They sit second, already on 81 points, and every home game now carries the weight of a run-in where one slip can matter. QPR are in a different fight entirely. They’re 14th, safe enough from serious danger, but still looking for a strong finish under Julien Stéphan and a bit of dignity after a frustrating spring.
For Ipswich, this is one of those fixtures they’re expected to control. Kieran McKenna’s side have been one of the division’s best at home all season, and Portman Road has barely been a venue for setbacks. QPR, though, have become awkward enough to make this interesting. They’ve scored goals on the road, they’ve had enough of the ball in recent matches to ask questions, and they certainly won’t arrive just to fill the numbers. That said, they’ve also been leaking goals at the wrong end of the pitch, and that’s a bad habit to carry into a ground where the hosts usually find a way through.
There’s also a nice bit of recent history here. Ipswich thumped QPR 4-1 at Loftus Road on 1 November 2025, which still sits in the back of the mind for this rematch. But these two have had tighter meetings too, and that’s the sort of wrinkle that keeps a late-season Championship game alive. Ipswich need the points more. QPR need to show they can land a blow on a side at the sharp end. Simple enough on paper. Rarely is in practice.
Ipswich’s last six have had the feel of a team getting the job done without quite blowing the doors off. They drew 2-2 away at Southampton on 28 April, having been pushed hard in a game where the shot count was high and the margins slim. Before that came a flat 0-0 at West Bromwich Albion, then an away win at Charlton Athletic where they were sharp enough to take a 2-1 result. Middlesbrough then came to Portman Road and left with a 2-2 draw, which says plenty about the current mood: Ipswich are still hard to beat, but not completely airtight. A 2-0 loss at Portsmouth and a 2-0 win at Norwich City round out the sequence. Mixed, yes. But not messy.
That draw at Southampton felt like the kind of away point promotion sides pick up. Ipswich had 19 shots, nine on target, and 1.78 expected goals from a game where they never really lacked threat. The problem was obvious too: they conceded twice from relatively little, and that’s been the only real irritation in an otherwise strong campaign. They’ve scored 77 league goals and only conceded 47, which is exactly what you’d expect from a side sitting second. At home, the record is even better. Thirteen wins, eight draws and just one defeat from 22 league matches, with 40 scored and only 17 conceded. That single home loss came all the way back on 21 October against Charlton. Since then, Portman Road has been close to a fortress.
The shape of the home record matters here. Ipswich don’t need to be blistering from start to finish to win these matches; they just need to keep the tempo high enough and the pressure constant enough that the other side cracks. They’ve only lost once at home all season, and their balance of goals for and against at Portman Road tells you they usually find the key moments. You’d expect them to carry the game here. QPR will get chances, but Ipswich have been too efficient at home to suggest they’ll leave this one empty-handed.
QPR arrive with a much shakier recent story. Their last six have produced one win, two draws and three defeats, and the momentum has gone completely. They beat Watford 2-1 on 3 April, then came the draws: 1-1 at Preston North End and 0-0 at home to Bristol City. Since then, it’s been a downward slide. A 2-0 defeat at Millwall was followed by home losses to Swansea City and Derby County, with the Derby game ending 3-2 after a lively but costly afternoon. They’ve scored in enough of those matches to stay dangerous. They’ve just not been able to stop the other side enough.
The home defeat to Derby was a classic example of QPR’s problem. They created plenty — 24 shots, 12 on target, 2.48 expected goals — and still lost because the defensive side of the game fell apart. That’s the story of their spring in a nutshell. They can get bodies forward, they can manufacture moments, and they’ve got enough attacking talent to land a punch or two. But they’ve also conceded 70 league goals overall, which is too many for a side trying to hold themselves together for 46 matches. Away from home, the record is respectable rather than strong: six wins, seven draws and nine defeats, with 21 scored and 33 conceded. That’s not catastrophic. It is vulnerable, though.
Still, QPR aren’t going to sit back and hope. Julien Stéphan’s side have had enough road output to suggest they can score, and they’ve found the net in plenty of their recent away and overall games. The issue is the other end. They’ve gone five matches without a win, and that kind of stretch tends to drag confidence down quickly. If they concede first at Portman Road, the whole afternoon gets heavier for them. And against a promotion-chasing home side, that’s usually where the damage starts.
Ipswich have had the better of this fixture recently. They beat QPR 4-1 away from home in November 2025, which was a proper statement result, and that came after a 0-0 draw at Portman Road in December 2023. Go back a little further and the trend becomes more uneven, with QPR enjoying wins in 2018 and 2017, but those games feel like part of a different era.
The current picture matters more. Ipswich are unbeaten in their last three against QPR, and that 4-1 win in the reverse fixture gives McKenna’s side a useful psychological edge. It won’t decide anything on its own. Still, when one side is flying near the top and the other is stuck in the middle with a leaky defence, recent history usually points the same way.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 5/6 for this one. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the correct score tips page pulls together correct score tips if you want a higher-variance angle built from match state and scoring patterns. Ipswich look the likelier winners, no doubt, but the BTTS angle fits the shape of the match better than a clean home win alone. QPR have scored in enough of their recent games to suggest they’ll ask questions, and Ipswich haven’t exactly been shutting everyone out lately either — Southampton and Middlesbrough both found a way through. This doesn’t scream a 1-0 grind.
The 2-1 correct score feels right. Ipswich should have the edge at Portman Road, where they’ve been outstanding all season, but QPR have enough about them to nick a goal and keep the home crowd alert. If you wanted a slightly safer route, Ipswich to win and both teams to score would be the natural alternative. But the straight BTTS play is the cleaner bet.
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