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Scunthorpe United host Southend United on Tuesday evening, 28 April 2026, in the National League playoffs, with a place in the next round and the chance to keep a promotion push alive on the line. This is the sort of game that strips everything down to nerve, shape and a bit of quality at the right end of the pitch. The two clubs finished the regular season separated by just a point, with Scunthorpe fifth on 82 and Southend sixth on 81, so there’s barely anything between them on paper.
There’s also a neat contrast in styles and recent mood. Scunthorpe have been solid without being spectacular, grinding their way into the postseason with a tough home record and a habit of keeping games tight. Southend, by contrast, have been far more explosive, scoring 83 league goals and arriving with plenty of attacking confidence, even if they’ve carried a few defensive scars with them. That blend usually points towards a tense, open contest. And that’s exactly how this one feels.
Scunthorpe’s final six league games told a very clear story: they’ve been difficult to break down, but not always sharp enough to turn control into wins. A 1-2 victory at FC Halifax Town on 28 March gave them a proper lift, then they were held 0-0 at home by Hartlepool United before edging Brackley Town 1-0 at home. The momentum didn’t quite carry through. They lost 2-0 at Gateshead, drew 1-1 away to Wealdstone, and then stumbled at home to Eastleigh on 25 April, losing 1-0 after Harvey Saunders struck in the 18th minute. One win in their last four isn’t ideal. You can feel the edge blunting a little.
At home, though, Scunthorpe have been more reliable than their recent wobble suggests. Their league record at Glanford Park stands at 12 wins, six draws and five defeats, with 37 scored and 28 conceded. That’s a pretty respectable return. They’re not a free-scoring home side, but they’ve done enough to stay in matches and usually give themselves a fighting chance. Their overall tally of 77 league goals is healthy, yet the shape of their season tells you they’re far more comfortable when the game stays controlled and physical rather than becoming a shootout.
The worry for Andy Butler is obvious: Scunthorpe have been unable to string together a truly dominant run at the business end of the season. They’ve won only two of their last six and failed to score in two of those. Still, there’s a stubbornness here. They don’t collapse often, and at home they’ve shown they can keep the door shut long enough to stay alive. That matters in a playoff tie. It really does.
Southend come into the tie with a very different recent rhythm. They’ve been entertaining, a bit chaotic at times, and usually good for a goal or three. Their last six games included a 0-3 win at Sutton United, a 2-0 success at Aldershot Town, and that absurd 2-6 victory at FC Halifax Town, a result that said a lot about their attacking ceiling and almost as much about their ability to blow teams apart when things click. They also drew 0-0 at home to Solihull Moors, lost a wild one 4-3 at Hartlepool United, and beat Wealdstone 2-1 at home on 25 April. That’s the profile of a side that lives on the front foot. No one would call them dull.
Away from home, Southend’s numbers are strong enough to command respect. They’ve taken 35 points on the road, with 10 wins, five draws and eight defeats, and they’ve scored 42 away goals while conceding 28. That’s proper attacking output. Kevin Maher’s side don’t go into away games trying to survive them; they go after them. Their record says they’ve got the tools to do damage in hostile settings, and the balance of goals at both ends backs that up. If they get an early foothold here, Scunthorpe won’t enjoy the evening.
The flip side is that Southend are never completely safe. They scored four at Hartlepool and still lost. They went to Halifax, scored six, and still had to ride the chaos. That’s the trade-off with this team. When they’re fluent, they can overwhelm anyone. When the game turns scrappy, they’re vulnerable. You’d expect them to score, yes. You’d also expect them to concede chances. That’s the price.
Recent meetings lean Scunthorpe’s way, and that does colour this playoff tie a bit. Scunthorpe beat Southend 1-0 at home on 7 February 2026, then won 2-0 away at Roots Hall on 27 September 2025. That’s a neat little double and it’ll give Butler’s team a bit of belief heading into this one.
Mind you, Southend have had their own moments in this fixture. They beat Scunthorpe 3-1 in April 2023 and 3-0 at home in October 2022, so there’s no deep historical dominance either way. The most relevant angle is simpler: these meetings usually produce a winner, and Southend have regularly found a way through Scunthorpe’s back line in the past. That matters when you’re weighing up a BTTS call.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/15 here. It’s short enough to look slightly uncomfortable at first glance, but it’s the right side of the market for this playoff tie. Scunthorpe have scored 77 league goals this season and have done enough at home to suggest they won’t freeze completely, while Southend arrive with 83 goals overall and a road record that’s built on attacking intent rather than caution.
The key detail is that neither side really fits a clean-sheet script. Scunthorpe have conceded 28 at home and Southend have scored 42 away; Southend have also been involved in plenty of open games lately, including that 4-3 defeat at Hartlepool and the 6-2 win at Halifax. A 1-1 draw feels the likeliest scoreline, with both teams finding a goal before the tension tightens. If you want a small alternative, Southend to score first has a fair case too, but BTTS is the main play.
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