Waterford FC host Derry City in the Premier Division on Friday evening, 15 May 2026, with both sides carrying very different moods into the game. Waterford are still searching for their first league win of the season and are stuck at the bottom end of the table, while Derry sit fifth and are trying to turn a season full of draws into something more convincing. There’s a real pressure gap here. Waterford need points just to stop the slide getting worse. Derry need a win to keep pace with the teams above them.
For Graham Coughlan’s side, this is becoming a familiar story: plenty of effort, too few rewards, and a defence that keeps leaking at the worst possible moments. Derry City, under Tiernan Lynch, are more stable, but they’re not exactly flying. They’ve drawn far too often and they were beaten at Drogheda United last time out, so they’ll arrive in Waterford with something to prove. That’s the tension in this one. One side are desperate, the other are frustrated.
The historical context leans Derry’s way as well. These two have already met once this season, when Derry beat Waterford 4-2 in February, and the wider pattern has been open, lively and usually unkind to the hosts. Waterford will feel they need to drag this into a proper scrap. If it becomes a football match played at pace, Derry are the better side.
Waterford FC Form & Analysis
Waterford’s last few weeks have been bleak, and that’s putting it politely. They went to St. Patrick’s Athletic on 8 May and came away with a 4-1 defeat, a result that summed up so much of their season: vulnerable at the back, open in transitions and punished when the game stretches. Before that, they drew 3-3 with Dundalk at home, which at least showed some fight, but it still felt like two points dropped rather than one gained. A late equaliser or a scramble for survival? Waterford keep finding themselves in those moments, and they keep coming out of them short.
The rest of the run tells the same tale. They lost 1-0 away to Shamrock Rovers, drew 1-1 with Galway United at home, lost 2-0 at Sligo Rovers and drew 1-1 at Bohemians. Five matches, no wins, and very little control of any sort. In the bigger picture, Waterford haven’t won in 15 league games. That’s a brutal run. You don’t stumble into that sort of sequence by accident. It usually means a team can compete in patches but can’t sustain it, and Waterford’s 13 goals scored and 32 conceded in the league make that plain enough.
Their home record is slightly less disastrous than the overall picture, but only slightly. At their own ground they’ve yet to win, with five draws and two defeats from seven league matches, scoring six and conceding nine. There’s a thread of stubbornness there, but no cutting edge. They’re not getting blown away every week at home, yet they’re not producing the kind of moments that win tight matches either. One goal in the right game changes the mood. At the minute, though, Waterford just don’t look like a side who can trust themselves to protect a lead or chase a game with any real authority. The flipside? They’ve also been scoring in patches, which is why you can’t rule them out of finding the net.
Derry City Form & Analysis
Derry’s recent form is steadier, although it’s not been perfect by any stretch. Their last six have brought a narrow 1-0 home win over Shamrock Rovers, a 2-1 away victory at Shelbourne, a 2-2 draw at Dundalk, a 1-1 draw with Bohemians away, a 1-1 draw at home to Galway United and then the 1-0 defeat at Drogheda United on 8 May. That’s the story of a side that’s tough to beat but too often settles for a point when they’ve got more in the tank. Mind you, beating Shelbourne away and Shamrock Rovers at home shows they do have a proper competitive edge when they get things right.
The issue for Derry is obvious. They’ve only won four league games and already drawn seven. That’s a lot of half-finished work. They’ve scored 19 and conceded 19, which tells you everything about the balance of their season. Not wild, not broken, just a little too ordinary. Tiernan Lynch will know that’s not enough if Derry want to climb. Their away form is decent without being emphatic: one win, four draws and three defeats, with six scored and eight conceded. They don’t get rolled over on the road, but they also don’t bang the door down. Can they keep it up away from home? That’s the question that keeps hanging over them.
Still, there are enough signs of control in their away performances to trust them more than Waterford. They’ve taken something from Bohemians and Dundalk on the road, and the away win at Shelbourne was a useful marker. The defeat at Drogheda last time out was a reminder that this side can still be kept quiet if the tempo drops and the game becomes scrappy. Yet the bigger picture is kinder to Derry than to their hosts. They’ve looked like the more organised outfit for most of the campaign. Not dominant. Just more secure. That matters here.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has a clear recent pattern, and Waterford haven’t enjoyed it. Derry won the last meeting 4-2 in February, and before that they were also 2-1 winners at Waterford in October 2025 and 7-2 winners at home in July 2025. Waterford did beat Derry 2-1 in April 2025 and again 2-1 in February 2025, so they’ve shown they can hurt them, but the more recent balance tilts hard towards Derry. Three wins in the last four meetings for Derry is the headline. That’s the clean version.
The games themselves have usually been open. There’s been a goal-heavy feel to this match-up for a while, and Waterford’s inability to keep clean sheets against Derry has been a recurring issue. Derry have found space against them repeatedly. Waterford will know that and probably won’t try to turn this into a chess match. They can’t afford to. If they sit back, they’ll likely get picked apart again.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 here. That price looks fair, and the 1.91 decimal is the kind of number that fits the match pretty neatly. Waterford keep finding a way to nick a goal even when they’re struggling, while Derry have generally been reliable enough in front of goal to expect them to contribute. The more telling part is at the other end: Waterford’s home record is still winless, but they’ve only failed to score in a limited number of recent games, and Derry’s away numbers are solid without being shut-down material.
A 1-2 away win feels the likeliest scoreline. Derry are the better side, the more composed side and the one with the stronger recent record in this fixture, but Waterford should get chances at home. They usually do. The 1.2 xG to 1.2 xG projection points to a fairly even chance creation game, even if the finishing and game control should tilt Derry’s way. The alternative angle would be Derry Draw No Bet or even a Derry win if you want to be bolder, but BTTS is the cleaner play. Waterford don’t keep clean sheets. Derry don’t need many openings. That should be enough.