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Waterford FC host Galway United in the Premier Division on Friday evening, 24 April 2026, and both sides come into it needing something very different from the evening. Waterford are stuck in 10th place with just four points from 11 matches, still without a league win, and the mood around the club is bleak. Galway are much healthier in sixth, on 14 points, but they’re not exactly flying either. They’ve shown enough to keep themselves in the top-half conversation. They just need to stop wasting good positions.
There’s also a bit of recent history to chew on. These two met only last month in a wild game in Galway, where the home side edged it 4-3 after a late flurry. Before that, Waterford had taken four points from the previous two league meetings, so there’s no shortage of goals or drama when these sides get together. Friday’s rematch comes with Waterford desperate to end an 11-match winless run and Galway looking to turn decent attacking moments into a more consistent away return.
For Waterford, the issue is obvious: they’ve been too open, too often, and they’re not scoring enough to cover it. Galway, by contrast, have enough punch going forward to ask questions, but they’ve also been vulnerable on the road. With the market leaning toward goals, this one has the feel of a match where the first clean sheet never arrives and the scoring doesn’t stop at one or two.
Waterford’s recent league form reads like a team stuck in a loop. They went to Sligo Rovers on 18 April and lost 2-0, a game that never really got away from them on the shot count but did on the scoreboard and in the big chances column. Before that came a 1-1 draw at Bohemians, a point that felt useful at the time but now looks more like another missed chance to finally build momentum. Earlier in April, they drew 1-1 at home to Shamrock Rovers. That was a respectable result on paper. It still didn’t break the spell.
Go back a little further and the picture gets worse. A 0-2 home defeat to St Patrick’s Athletic on 20 March was followed by the madcap 4-3 loss away to Galway and then a humiliating 5-0 defeat at Dundalk. That’s the story of Waterford’s season in a nutshell: they can be dragged into chaotic games, but they usually come out of them bruised. No wins in 11 league games is the blunt reality. Three draws and eight defeats since their last victory. That’s not a patch. That’s a crisis.
At home, Waterford have taken only three points from five league games, and that’s from three draws rather than anything more convincing. They’ve scored just twice at their own ground and conceded five, which tells you why the crowd hasn’t had much to cheer. Two home goals in five matches is a grim return. They’re not being battered every week at home, which is one small comfort, but they’re not doing nearly enough in the final third to force games in their direction. Even so, the underlying numbers suggest they’re not shy about trying to play. Their recent match in Sligo featured 16 shots and four on target. The problem is that effort hasn’t translated into goals. That won’t go on forever, though the wait for a breakout has already been a long one.
The one positive Waterford can cling to is that they’re usually not far away from a goal at home, even when the result goes against them. That matters here because Galway have given up chances away from home all season. Still, Waterford’s defensive record is the bigger worry. Conceding 23 goals in 11 league matches is simply too much. You can survive that if you’re scoring at the other end. They’re not.
Galway arrive with a much more encouraging shape to their season, even if their form still carries a few dents. Their last six league matches have been a mix of frustration and quality. They lost 2-1 away to Dundalk on 17 April, a game where they actually carved out chances but were badly outdone in the shot battle and came away empty-handed. Before that, they produced one of their best results of the campaign with a 3-2 away win at Drogheda United. That was the kind of performance that tells you they’ve got life in them on the road. They can score, and they can fight back.
At home, they beat Derry City 2-1 on 3 April, which followed a 2-0 defeat away to Shamrock Rovers and that 4-3 home win over Waterford in mid-March. There’s a pattern here. Galway are rarely boring. They’ve scored 14 league goals already and only six of those results over the past few weeks have been truly flat. Even in defeat, they tend to have moments. That’s why they sit in sixth rather than drifting lower down the table. The attack keeps them in games.
The away record is less tidy, and that’s where the concern creeps in. Galway have only one away win from six league outings, with just four points collected on the road and nine goals conceded. They’ve also kept very few clean sheets away from home, which is a real problem when they’re visiting a team like Waterford who, poor as they’ve been, can still nick a goal in the right conditions. Their away games tend to have a loose edge to them. Open spaces. Loose marking. Plenty of room for both teams to get chances. That suits this fixture far more than it suits a cautious away favourite.
Still, Galway look the stronger side. They’ve won four league games, drawn two and lost five, which is a decent enough return in a middle-of-the-pack season. They’re not airtight, but they’re more coherent than Waterford and much more dangerous in the final third. If they keep the tempo high, Waterford’s back line will struggle.
This pairing has been a source of goals for a while, and the most recent meeting was a perfect example. On 16 March, Galway won 4-3 at home in a thriller that swung all over the place. That result came after Waterford had been unbeaten in the previous two league meetings, beating Galway 1-0 at home in May 2025 and drawing 1-1 at home in November 2025. There’s been a fair amount of back-and-forth, but the common thread is simple enough. These games don’t usually stay quiet.
The broader pattern is hard to ignore. Both teams have failed to keep clean sheets in most of the recent meetings, and that fits the way they’ve been playing this season. Waterford are leaking goals almost everywhere they go. Galway are more productive, but they haven’t exactly locked things down away from home. When these two meet, chances tend to come quickly. You wouldn’t expect Friday to be any different.
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 10/11 for this one. That price feels fair, maybe even a touch generous, when you put Waterford’s leaky defending next to Galway’s ability to create and score away from home. Waterford have conceded 23 league goals in 11 matches and haven’t won a game all season. Galway, meanwhile, have already been involved in a handful of open, messy contests, including that 4-3 win over Waterford last month. This has goals written all over it.
The predicted scoreline is 1-2 to Galway United, which fits the balance of the matchup. Waterford probably find a goal at home — they’ve been poor, but not totally toothless in front of their own crowd — yet Galway look the likelier winners because they’ve got more attacking threat and a little more control in the final third. If you wanted a safer alternative, Both Teams To Score would have real appeal too. But the totals market is the cleaner angle. Three goals should be the minimum expectation here.
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