Leeds welcome Crystal Palace in a meeting that pits survival anxiety against top‑five ambition. The numbers frame it starkly: Leeds sit in 17th, Palace in 5th, and the recent rhythms of both teams point to very different problems to solve. Palace arrive off a 3-0 league defeat to Manchester City – a game where Erling Haaland struck twice and, as highlighted by Theo Walcott and Joe Hart, City’s back line absorbed pressure before Phil Foden helped close it out. Leeds, meanwhile, have been chaotic rather than compact, scoring freely but leaking chances at an alarming rate.
The table picture and recent momentum
Leeds’ last fortnight says plenty: a 1-1 at Brentford, a 3-3 home draw with Liverpool and a 1-3 loss to Chelsea preceded by a 3-2 reverse at Manchester City. Palace’s ledger has been more controlled across all competitions – wins away to Fulham (2-1) and Burnley (1-0), and at Shelbourne (3-0), offset by defeats to Manchester United (1-2) and Manchester City (0-3). The season snapshot underscores the divide.
| Team | Pos | GP | W | D | L | F | A | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leeds | 17 | 16 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 20 | 30 | -10 | 16 |
| Crystal Palace | 5 | 16 | 7 | 5 | 4 | 20 | 15 | 5 | 26 |
Leeds’ season profile is combustible: BTTS has landed in 63% of their league games and in all of their last five matches, with 80% of those five clearing Over 2.5. They concede, on average, every 48 minutes this season. Palace are steadier – BTTS at 44% and Over 2.5 at 50% – and concede far more slowly, roughly every 96 minutes.
Head‑to‑head: scars and successes
There’s contemporary scar tissue here. The most recent Premier League meeting in Yorkshire ended in a heavy home defeat for Leeds, and Palace have generally found ways to stay in matches in this fixture. The topline head‑to‑head numbers are tight, though.
| Team | Goals (H2H sample) | Wins | Clean sheets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leeds | 12 | 3 (30%) | 3 |
| Crystal Palace | 16 | 3 (30%) | 1 |
The recent results list shows why Leeds will talk about control rather than revenge: Palace have landed decisive blows more than once in the past few years.
| Date | Competition | Fixture | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 09 Apr 2023 | Premier League | Leeds vs Crystal Palace | Leeds 1–5 Crystal Palace |
| 09 Oct 2022 | Premier League | Crystal Palace vs Leeds | Crystal Palace 2–1 Leeds |
| 22 Jul 2022 | Friendlies Clubs | Crystal Palace vs Leeds | Crystal Palace 0–0 Leeds |
| 25 Apr 2022 | Premier League | Leeds vs Crystal Palace | Leeds 1–0 Crystal Palace |
| 30 Nov 2021 | Premier League | Leeds vs Crystal Palace | Leeds 2–0 Crystal Palace |
Style and tendencies in the numbers
Leeds are erratic but dangerous: their season shot‑conversion sits at 42%, and their last five matches have seen them score and concede at the same clip (a goal roughly every 45 minutes either way). Palace are more methodical. They’ve managed 68 shots on target this season (Leeds 48) and their top scoring window comes after the hour (61–75 minutes). Leeds’ defensive lapse rate – the conceded goal every 48 minutes – is the red flag that keeps popping up in the data.
| Metric (season, 16 fixtures) | Leeds | Crystal Palace |
|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes) | 63% | 44% |
| Over 2.5 goals | 69% | 50% |
| Scored first | 25% | 56% |
| Min/Goal (For) | 72 min | 72 min |
| Min/Goal (Against) | 48 min | 96 min |
Discipline and territory tilt Palace’s way as well: they average more corners for (3.69 to Leeds’ 2.63), while Leeds’ attack relies on converting the chances they do carve. Palace’s “after the hour” threat – their top minute window is 61–75 – dovetails awkwardly with Leeds’ habit of fading defensively.
Model view and what could swing it
Model signals lean toward a narrow, attritional contest – albeit with mixed cues.
| Market | Pick | Probability |
|---|---|---|
| Match Winner (1X2) | Crystal Palace | 36% |
| Over/Under 2.5 | UNDER 2.5 | 55% |
| BTTS | BTTS: YES | 56% |
Those percentages echo the story so far: Palace have been more dependable at managing games, but Leeds’ tendency to trade chances is hard to ignore. If the hosts repeat the 100% BTTS pattern of their last five, a point becomes plausible. If Palace’s away control (conceding every 96 minutes on average this season) holds, their 5th‑place platform should travel.
Scenarios
– A Leeds win would ease the pressure of 17th place and add substance to the idea that their attack can outweigh defensive frailties.
– A Palace win would confirm their top‑five trajectory and their capacity to tidy up after setbacks like the recent City defeat.
– A draw keeps both narratives alive: Leeds still volatile but alive; Palace still hard to beat, even if not always fluent.
For those scanning the wider European slate, Kickwie’s hub for premier league predictions offers a useful comparison point on trends and totals across the weekend.
