St. Patrick’s Athletic host Bohemian FC at Richmond Park on Friday evening in a Premier Division meeting that carries real weight in the early title picture. Stephen Kenny’s side sit second on 23 points, just ahead of a crowded pack and with every home game now feeling like a chance to keep pressure on the leaders. Bohemians are fourth on 20 points and have been stubborn enough to stay within touching distance, but they’ve also gone six league games without a win. That’s the tension here: one side arriving with momentum, the other with a defence that’s been hard to crack but an attack that’s gone flat.
There’s history to this fixture too, and plenty of it has been tight. The sides have drawn three of their last four meetings 0-0, with St. Pat’s also winning 3-0 at home in March 2025 and Bohemians nicking a 2-1 win in Dublin last April. So while the table says this should be a top-four contest with teeth, the recent evidence has often pointed to caution, not chaos. Friday night could still be decided by one moment. Or none at all.
St. Patrick's Athletic Form & Analysis
St. Patrick’s Athletic come into this on the back of a messy but useful win at Drogheda United, where they came through 3-1 on 17 April after a game that didn’t exactly flatter them. Drogheda had their moments and the xG line was tighter than the score suggested, but Kenny’s team did what better sides do when they’re not at their best: they found the goals. Aidan Keena struck inside a minute, Conor Keeley’s own goal helped swing the match, and Kian Leavy plus Brandon Kavanagh finished it off. That win snapped the frustration of a 1-0 home loss to Shamrock Rovers and kept them on track after a mixed little run.
Before that, there was a clear pattern. They beat Sligo Rovers 4-1 at home, beat Waterford 2-0 away, and drew 0-0 with Derry City at Richmond Park. Then came the home defeat to Shamrock Rovers and the odd 2-0 loss at Dundalk, which was a reminder that their level can dip when the game gets scrappy. Still, the overall picture is a strong one: seven wins, two draws and three defeats from 12 league matches, with 21 scored and only 10 conceded. That’s the sort of balance that keeps you in the mix at the top. They’ve also tended to be better at home, where the numbers are especially sharp.
Richmond Park has been kind to them this season. St. Pat’s are 4-1-1 at home with 13 goals scored and only three conceded, which is a serious base for any side with league ambitions. Three clean sheets from six at home is tidy stuff, and even when they don’t run away with games, they usually keep control. The slight wrinkle is that they’ve gone five matches without a clean sheet overall, so the back line isn’t suddenly untouchable. That said, if you’re backing them not to lose, you’re leaning on a side that almost always gives itself a platform. They don’t need much to make you pay.
The attack has enough variety to trouble Bohemians too. Keena is already finding key moments, while Kavanagh and Leavy are giving them goals from midfield areas. St. Pat’s aren’t purely about possession or pattern play; they’ll go direct when they need to, and at home they’ve usually had the pace to force opponents backwards. Against a Bohemians team that’s been tight but blunt, that edge matters.
Bohemian FC Form & Analysis
Bohemians arrive with a different story. They’ve been difficult to beat for long stretches, but the wins have dried up and that’s the problem. Their last six league matches tell a pretty clear tale: a 2-1 defeat at Shamrock Rovers on 17 April, a 2-1 home loss to Sligo Rovers, and then a run of draws against Waterford, Drogheda United, Dundalk and Shelbourne. Four straight draws before the most recent defeat. That’s not a disaster, but it’s not enough when the top sides keep banking points.
The away draw at Shamrock Rovers, though, was a funny one. Bohemians actually produced a strong attacking return on paper, posting 2.08 xG and landing 23 shots, but they still lost 2-1 because the finishing and the outcome didn’t match the territorial edge. Graham Burke scored twice, one from the spot, and that was that. It’s a decent reminder that Bohemians can create. It’s also a reminder that creating doesn’t automatically win you points. Their season record reflects that split personality: five wins, five draws and just two defeats overall, with only 14 goals scored in 12 games. Tight. Too tight, probably.
Away from home, they’ve actually been the best side in the division on points, which sounds better than it plays. Their away record is 3-2-1 with seven scored and only two conceded, so Alan Reynolds has built something genuinely resilient on the road. The shape is compact, the defensive numbers are excellent, and they’ve not been getting steamrollered. But the attack has gone missing in recent weeks. In four of their last six league games, they’ve scored one goal or fewer, and in two of those they didn’t score at all. That’s the kind of run that turns good away form into frustration. Can they keep nicking points if the front line stays this quiet? Probably not forever.
The positive for Bohemians is that they don’t need much to stay alive in a game. The negative is that they rarely look like running away with anything. Their 14 goals for the season is a low figure for a side sitting fourth, and away from home they’ve become the sort of team that can spoil a match without really taking it over. That can work on the road. It’s a harder sell at Richmond Park, where St. Pat’s usually get on the front foot early.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has settled into a habit of caution. Three of the last four meetings have ended 0-0, including both games at Bohemians’ ground earlier in the calendar and the goalless draw at Richmond Park in July 2025. That alone tells you plenty. These sides don’t often give each other an inch.
There are exceptions, of course. St. Patrick’s Athletic beat Bohemians 3-0 at home in March 2025, and Bohemians won 2-1 in April last year. Still, the dominant pattern is low-scoring and tight. The recent meetings have been cagey enough that a single goal can change the whole feel of the match. That won’t surprise anyone who’s watched this rivalry over the past couple of seasons.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
Double Chance 1X at 1/4 looks the safest play here. St. Patrick’s Athletic are the stronger side at the top end of the table, and their home record is far too solid to ignore: four wins, one draw and only one defeat, with just three goals conceded at Richmond Park. Bohemians are stubborn, especially away from home, but they haven’t won in six league games and their attack has gone quiet at exactly the wrong time. That’s the key.
The xG projection points to a fairly close contest — 1.4 to 0.9 in St. Pat’s favour — and that fits the feel of the game. Bohemians can keep it tight. They usually do. But a 1-1 scoreline looks the likeliest outcome if they get anything at all, while a narrow 1-0 home win feels just as live. If you want a slightly bolder angle, under 2.5 goals is live given the recent head-to-head pattern, but 1X is the cleaner call. St. Pat’s should avoid defeat.