


A close Championship contest could hinge on the smallest details — who handles the pressure better at the Swansea.com Stadium?
Swansea City welcome Charlton Athletic in a Championship meeting that looks finely balanced on paper but rich in tactical intrigue. Both sides arrive with a pattern of tight, competitive games, setting up a contest where patience and efficiency could matter more than flair.

Swansea City come into this fixture with a respectable recent return of 2 wins, 3 draws and 1 defeat, scoring 1.67 goals per game across that run. Their home numbers are more restrained, though, with 1.17 goals scored per match at home and a record that suggests they are competitive rather than dominant in front of their own supporters.
The lack of tournament congestion should allow Swansea to keep a regular rhythm, and that matters in a match where control will be valued. Their tendency to keep scores down at home, combined with 83% of their home matches going over 1.5 goals and 83% staying under 3.5, points to a side that can be difficult to break down but not always ruthless enough to settle games early.
The head-to-head record is tight, with Swansea holding a slight edge at 2 wins to Charlton's 1, alongside 2 draws. The low average total goals figure of 1.0 underlines how often these meetings have turned into controlled, low-scoring affairs rather than open exchanges.
That pattern is reinforced by the broader scoring profile, with 100% of the recent meetings staying under 3.5 goals. Even when the match stays close, history suggests neither side gives much away, which makes margins small and first goals especially important.
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Charlton Athletic arrive with a mixed overall return of 1 win, 2 draws and 3 defeats, averaging 1.17 goals scored across those matches. Away from home, though, they have been stubborn, going unbeaten in 5 of their 6 road games and scoring exactly 1 goal per away match, which suggests a side that can stay in contests even when not at their best.
Their away profile is built more on resilience than authority, with 5 draws from 6 trips and a strong tendency to keep games within reach. With no fixture congestion to worry about, Charlton should be able to set up compactly and lean on a measured approach, but their challenge is turning that resistance into enough attacking threat against a Swansea side that usually makes home teams work hard for openings.