St. Patrick’s Athletic host Shelbourne in the Premier Division on Friday evening, 15 May 2026, and it feels like one of those games that can tell us plenty about the title race and the chasing pack in one go. Stephen Kenny’s side are sitting second and have been doing the business at home all season, while Joseph O’Brien’s Shelbourne arrive in seventh and still looking a bit short of the consistency needed to climb into the European conversation.
There’s a neat tension here. St. Patrick’s Athletic are trying to keep pace at the top after a strong start to the campaign, with 31 points from 16 matches and a home record that’s been nasty for visiting teams. Shelbourne, though, have hardly been pushovers away from home. Four wins, two draws and only one defeat on the road is a tidy return, and that’s exactly why this isn’t a routine home banker. It’s a proper test for both.
The recent head-to-head meetings add a bit of spice too. These two played out a five-goal thriller in Dublin on 6 March, with St. Patrick’s Athletic winning 3-2 at Shelbourne. That result followed a goalless draw in November and a couple of tight encounters before that. One side has been edging it, but barely. This rarely turns into a stroll.
St. Patrick's Athletic Form & Analysis
St. Patrick’s Athletic have hit this stretch of the season looking sharp and, just as importantly, fairly ruthless at home. Their most recent outing was a 4-1 demolition of Waterford FC on 8 May, a game they controlled from early on and finished with a flourish. John Mahon struck after five minutes, Chris Forrester added a penalty before half-time, and Zac Elbouzedi then tore through the match with a brace in the second half. Ryan Edmondson rounded it off. That was the kind of performance that tells you a side’s confidence is in good nick. They didn’t just win. They swaggered.
Before that, there were two straight draws on the road, first a 1-1 at Sligo Rovers and then a 2-2 at Galway United, and those results came after a strong home win over Bohemian FC, 3-1 at Richmond Park. The only blemish in the recent run is the 1-0 home loss to Shamrock Rovers back on 10 April, but even that sits in a broader picture of five matches unbeaten since. So this isn’t a team stumbling into a big fixture. They’re on the front foot, and they’ve started to find the balance between control and punch in the final third.
Their overall home numbers are the sort managers love and opponents dread: six wins, one draw and one defeat, with 20 goals scored and only five conceded at their own ground. That defensive record jumps off the page. Five conceded in eight home matches is excellent, full stop. They’re also averaging more than two goals per home game, and the recent xG numbers from the Waterford match — 2.84 created, 1.34 allowed — fit the pattern. They’re not just nicking results. They’re creating enough to win properly.
The flip side? They’re not completely watertight. St. Patrick’s Athletic haven’t kept a clean sheet in three, and Shelbourne are lively enough going forward to ask questions. Still, when you’ve won six of eight at home and scored in almost every one of those games, you’d expect them to carry the greater threat. They’ve got momentum, they’ve got home edge, and they’ve got the stronger underlying case in front of goal.
Shelbourne Form & Analysis
Shelbourne come into this one with a very different feel around them. Their most recent result was a frustrating 0-0 draw at home to Sligo Rovers on 8 May, and while the shot count was healthy enough — 28 attempts with eight on target — they never found the finish. That’s the story of a few of their recent games. They’re not short of effort or volume, but the end product has been patchy. A side can live with that for a while. Not forever.
Before that draw, they were held 2-2 at Bohemian FC, which at least showed they can travel and score, and they’d beaten Dundalk FC 2-1 away from home on 1 May. That was a useful away win, a clean little response after a messy spell. But then you rewind a touch further and the picture becomes more erratic: a 4-3 home defeat to Drogheda United, a 2-1 loss to Derry City, and a 3-2 reverse at Shamrock Rovers. Goals have been coming. Points haven’t always followed. That’s the problem.
The away record, though, is a major reason they can’t be dismissed. Four wins, two draws and only one defeat from seven away league matches is strong stuff, especially for a team sitting in mid-table. They’ve scored 12 and conceded nine on the road, which tells you they’re competitive rather than comfortable, but competitive is enough to keep them dangerous. They know how to stay in games away from home. That matters here.
Still, there’s a nagging weakness. Shelbourne have only one clean sheet in that run of recent matches, and their broader form reads like a side that can score but rarely gets two things right at once. The draw with Sligo was a bit sterile after the chaos of the previous weeks, and you have to wonder whether they’ve got the control to absorb a side as efficient as St. Patrick’s Athletic for 90 minutes. Can they keep it tidy at the back in Dublin? That’s the real question. If they can’t, they’ll be chasing.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been tight, lively and usually worth a goal or three. St. Patrick’s Athletic won the meeting in March 3-2 at Shelbourne, while the sides also played out a 0-0 draw in November. Go back a bit further and the pattern is similar enough: St. Patrick’s Athletic beat Shelbourne 2-0 in the FAI Cup in August 2025, Shelbourne edged a 1-0 league win in June 2025, and the two drew 0-0 at Richmond Park in April that year.
The one clear thread is that St. Patrick’s Athletic haven’t lost any of the last three meetings. That won’t decide Friday on its own, but it does matter. Shelbourne have shown they can make life awkward in this fixture. St. Patrick’s Athletic have still found a way to stay a step ahead more often than not.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing St. Patrick’s Athletic to win at 5/6 here. That’s a fair price for a home side with a 6-1-1 record at their own ground, a defence that’s given up just five goals there, and a recent home performance against Waterford that looked every bit like a team in rhythm. Shelbourne’s away record is strong enough to make this interesting, but they’ve also been inconsistent enough to trust less than Kenny’s side.
The 2-1 correct score feels right. St. Patrick’s Athletic should create the better chances and have enough quality to take the points, but Shelbourne have scored in plenty of their recent games and can lean on their road form to nick one. If you want a livelier angle, Both Teams to Score also has a case given how often Shelbourne have found the net away from home and how often St. Patrick’s Athletic have been involved in open, goal-heavy games lately. Still, the home win is the cleanest call.