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Northampton Town welcome Barnsley to Sixfields on Tuesday 28 April 2026 in League One, and the stakes are heavy at both ends of the table. Northampton are stuck in 24th place with 35 points, staring at a miserable season that has drifted into damage-limitation territory. Barnsley sit 15th on 56 points, safely away from the danger zone but well short of anything exciting. One side is fighting to stop the rot. The other is trying to finish with some dignity.
There’s a bit of history to this meeting, too. Barnsley have had the better of this fixture for a while, but Northampton will point to the fact that this has been a goal-heavy pairing of late and that they’ve at least found a way to trouble the Tykes in recent meetings. Both clubs have arrived here on the back of defeats on 25 April. Northampton were thumped 5-1 at Cardiff City. Barnsley went down 2-1 at Luton Town. Neither camp is exactly brimming with confidence. That matters.
For Northampton, this is about pride as much as points now. For Barnsley, it’s about avoiding a sloppy end to the campaign and perhaps finishing with a few answers for Conor Hourihane to work with. The table says one thing. The recent scoring patterns say another. This could get messy.
Northampton’s last six league matches have been a bleak little run, and there’s no dressing it up. They’ve lost every single one. Cardiff City put five past them on 25 April, Doncaster Rovers beat them 3-1 at Sixfields a week earlier, and even the narrower defeats have carried the same familiar feel: concede first, chase the game, and come up short. Before that came a 2-1 loss at Luton Town, a 3-1 home defeat to Wigan Athletic, a 1-0 reverse at Bradford City, and a 4-1 hammering at Mansfield Town. It’s been a slide, not a stumble.
The home record tells its own story. Northampton have won six, drawn four and lost 11 at Sixfields in the league, scoring 21 goals and conceding 27. That’s not the profile of a side that regularly controls matches in front of its own fans. They’ve actually been more fragile at home than you’d want, and the lack of clean sheets has become a real weight around their necks. Fifteen league games without a win tells you all you need to know. That’s a long, ugly run. Too long.
What Northampton do still carry is a sense that they can nick a goal. They’ve scored in enough of these recent defeats to keep the scoreboard ticking, and that’s one reason the BTTS angle keeps hovering over their matches. But they’re also giving opponents too many looks. The 5-1 loss at Cardiff was brutal, yet it wasn’t a one-off in terms of defensive collapse. The pattern’s been there for weeks: they concede too early, too often, and once they’re chasing it, the shape goes. That won’t be ideal against a Barnsley side that, even in an inconsistent season, has enough attacking quality to punish soft defending.
Barnsley’s form isn’t flattering either, but it’s a different kind of frustration. They’ve taken one win from their last six, and that came away at Rotherham United on 11 April, a 3-1 result that looked as if it might kick-start something. It hasn’t really done that. Since then they’ve drawn 0-0 at Port Vale, shared a 2-2 with Bradford City at home, and then slipped to back-to-back away defeats against Stevenage and Luton Town. The latest setback was the 2-1 loss at Kenilworth Road, where they were beaten despite taking the lead through Nahki Wells’ penalty. That’s the irritating bit. They’ve had moments and still haven’t controlled enough games.
Away from home, Barnsley’s record is only middling: five wins, eight draws and nine losses, with 28 scored and 36 conceded. It’s not disastrous, but it’s hardly the sort of road form that inspires real trust. They’ve failed to keep a clean sheet in enough of those away games to leave themselves exposed, and the recent run away from Oakwell has lacked punch. Still, they do carry more attacking threat than Northampton, and their league total of 66 goals is the clearest indication of where their strength lies. Even when results wobble, they usually find a way to create chances.
The flip side? Barnsley are still conceding too often to feel secure. A 2-2 draw at home to Bradford, a 0-0 at Port Vale, then defeats at Stevenage and Luton — it’s a sequence that says they’re competitive, but not ruthless. You can beat them if you stay organised. Northampton, though, haven’t looked organised in weeks. That’s why this feels like a game Barnsley can at least score in, and probably should score in. You’d expect them to have enough quality to test a shaky back line.
This fixture has been friendly to goals, and Barnsley have had the upper hand in the results. The teams drew 2-2 at Barnsley on 3 February 2026, while Barnsley won 2-1 at Northampton in February 2025. Before that, there was another 2-2 in South Yorkshire in August 2024, a 1-1 draw at Barnsley in April 2024, and Barnsley won 2-1 again at Sixfields in September 2023. Northampton’s only victory in the six-game sample came all the way back in the EFL Cup in August 2016. That’s a long time ago.
The real pattern here is simple. Barnsley haven’t lost this matchup in the last five meetings, and both teams have scored in all six of the recent head-to-heads listed. That trend matters. Northampton have been hard to trust defensively for months, and Barnsley have usually found a way to get on the board against them. No clean sheets. Plenty of traffic at both ends. It’s the kind of record that leans hard towards goals again.
Both Teams To Score at 4/6 looks the right call here. It’s short enough to be respected, and there’s a proper football case for it. Northampton have gone 15 league matches without a win, but they’ve still been nicking goals in plenty of those games. Barnsley, meanwhile, have enough attacking quality to score on the road and have done so regularly enough away from home, even if their results haven’t always followed. Put those together and BTTS feels far safer than trying to guess the winner.
The 1-2 correct score also fits the shape of the game. Northampton’s back line has been too easy to breach, and Barnsley should get their chances. At the same time, Barnsley haven’t exactly been shutting teams out with regularity, so Northampton having one decent spell and finding a goal wouldn’t be a surprise at all. If you wanted a slightly bolder angle, over 2.5 goals has obvious appeal given the recent meeting history, but BTTS is the cleaner route.
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