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Home League One

Leyton Orient’s Relegation Crisis

underthegreysky1971 by underthegreysky1971
28/03/2026
in League One, Stats Dive, The Data
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Leyton Orient Form analysis

Leyton Orient Form analysis

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Leyton Orient’s Relegation Crisis: Inside League One’s Most Alarming Slide

Form Analysis:
Current Position: 21st | Form (Last 5): LLLDL
Points from Last 5: 1 pt (0.20 PPG) | Season PPG: 1.06
Article Date: 18-02-2026 | Competition: League One

Twelve months ago, Leyton Orient were dreaming of the Premier League. A rousing play-off run that ended only in the Wembley final had the east London club believing that League One was merely a pit stop on a rapid climb upwards. Fast forward to February 2026, and the picture could barely be more different. After a 3-1 home defeat to Plymouth Argyle on Tuesday evening — their fifth loss in six games — the O’s have tumbled into the relegation zone, and the questions about Richie Wellens’ side are growing louder by the week.

With 31 games played and just 15 remaining, the margin for error is vanishing. Stockport County and Peterborough United are pulling clear at the summit while Leyton Orient find themselves dragged toward the trap door they were supposed to be nowhere near. The January transfer window has come and gone, five new faces have arrived, and yet the results have not followed. This is a club in genuine distress, and the data makes uncomfortable reading.

The Big Question: Is this a temporary dip that a squad with genuine quality can reverse, or has Leyton Orient’s season fundamentally collapsed? We dive into the data to find out.


The Numbers Don’t Lie

League One Form Table (Last 5 Games)

League One Form Table (Last 5 Games)

PosTeamPWDLGFGAGDPtsPPGForm
1Luton5410115+6132.6WDWWW
2Lincoln5410104+6132.6DWWWW
3Stockport County5320113+8112.2DWWDW
4Plymouth5311105+5102WWLWD
5Wigan531185+3102LDWWW
6Blackpool531152+3102DWWLW
7Stevenage531145-1102WDWWL
8Doncaster530235-291.8WWLLW
9Mansfield Town522173+481.6WWDLD
10Burton Albion522143+181.6WLDDW
11Bolton521297+271.4LWDLW
12Bradford521255+071.4DLWWL
13Port Vale521225-371.4WLLWD
14Cardiff513144+061.2LDDWD
15Huddersfield513189-161.2LDWDD
16Peterborough512297+251WDLDL
17Exeter City512255+051LDLWD
18Barnsley512246-251LDLWD
19Reading511355+040.8LWDLL
20Wycombe5113810-240.8LWLLD
21Leyton Orient503224-230.6DDLLD
22Rotherham5014110-910.2LDLLL
23Northampton5005412-800LLLLL
24AFC Wimbledon5005010-1000LLLLL

Updated: 17 Apr 2026, 10:00 AM

Over their last 5 matches, Leyton Orient have accumulated just 1 point, giving them a points-per-game average of 0.20 during that spell. To put that in context, their season average prior to this run was already a modest 1.06 PPG — itself barely above relegation-survival pace — and that has now been dragged down further. A run of form this poor, sustained over five matches, is not bad luck. It is a structural problem.

1

Points (Last 5)

0

Wins (Last 5)

0.20

PPG (Form)

1.06

PPG (Season)

Season-wide, Orient’s record of W9 D6 L16 from 31 games tells a story of a side that has been inconsistent at best and fragile at worst. Sixteen defeats in a 46-game season is a relegation-zone total — and with 15 games remaining, they need to find something significantly better than 1.06 PPG to be confident of survival. A rough guide to League One safety typically sits around 50-52 points. Orient currently have 33. They need at least 17-19 more points from 15 games. That means averaging close to 1.2 PPG for the rest of the campaign — a standard they have not hit in months.


The Results Breakdown

Leyton Orient Recent Form

Leyton Orient - Recent League Form

DLLDDWWWWL

The only crumb of comfort in Orient’s recent run was a goalless draw away at Stockport County on 7th February — a result that looked reasonable on the day given Stockport’s title-challenging credentials, but which has been sandwiched by four defeats that make for grim reading. The slide began in late January with a 2-1 loss at Bolton, followed immediately by a 3-0 hiding at Doncaster and then a 1-0 home defeat to Port Vale. February then brought the Stockport draw before last night’s 3-1 collapse against Plymouth brought a grimly familiar story: a promising first-half display undone by a catastrophic second-half capitulation.

Defining Moments in the Collapse

  • Bolton 2-1 Orient (24 Jan): A winnable game on the road that slipped away — the first defeat of what has become a damaging run.
  • Doncaster 3-0 Orient (27 Jan): The heaviest defeat of the run and arguably the lowest point, coming just three days after the Bolton loss. No shots on target is rumoured; no real fight shown.
  • Orient 0-1 Port Vale (31 Jan): The most damaging of all in context — losing at home to a fellow relegation-threatened side. Direct six-pointer points dropped.
  • Orient 1-3 Plymouth (17 Feb): Last night’s result. Equalized spectacularly just before half-time after falling behind, only to implode in the second half. The 11th time this season they have conceded three goals.

Is It Sustainable? The Stats Analysis

The underlying numbers from last night’s match provide some of the starkest evidence of Orient’s problems. Despite enjoying 54.4% possession and matching Plymouth on corner kicks (6 apiece), the O’s managed only 4 shots on target compared to Plymouth’s 9. They attempted 12 shots in total versus Plymouth’s 16. Goalkeeper Tobi Oluwayemi made 6 saves to Plymouth’s 3 — meaning had the goalkeeper not been in inspired form, the scoreline could have been far more embarrassing.

Rolling xG Trends

5-Match Rolling xG Average

Leyton Orient - 5-Match Rolling xG 2025/2026

Rolling 5-match average | Green above red = Creating more than conceding

Reading the Chart: Green line = xG created, Red line = xG conceded. Green above red indicates dominance. In Orient’s current form window, the red line has consistently outpaced the green — they are creating fewer quality chances than they concede, regardless of the possession numbers. This is the hallmark of a genuine defensive and attacking problem, not a temporary blip.

Luck Index: Points vs xG Points

Actual Points vs Deserved Points

Leyton Orient - Actual Points vs xG Points 2025/2026

51
Actual Points
45
xG Points
+6
Overperforming

Reading the Chart: Solid line = actual points, dashed line = “deserved” points based on xG. Orient’s actual points and xG points have tracked closely this season — meaning they are not being particularly unlucky. Their league position reflects their underlying performance level. This is the most uncomfortable truth of all.

Conversion Rates

Attack & Defence Conversion

Leyton Orient - Conversion Rates 2025/2026

Clinical
57 goals from 19 xG
Poor
66 conceded from 23.6 xGA

100% = converting exactly as xG predicts | Attack: higher is better | Defence: lower is better

The Stats Verdict

The data paints a bleak but honest picture. Orient are not being dramatically unlucky — their xG output has broadly matched their points return all season. Defensively, conceding three or more goals on 11 separate occasions this season is a League One-leading (for all the wrong reasons) statistic. Oluwayemi is regularly called upon to make multiple saves per game, as evidenced by his six-save performance against Plymouth. In attack, possession is being hoarded without being converted into shots of quality — only 4 on target from 12 attempts against Plymouth with 54% of the ball is a damning conversion rate. This is a structural issue that individual brilliance alone cannot solve.


Tactical Patterns

When Do They Score and Concede?

Goals by Time Period

Leyton Orient - Goals by Time Period 2025/2026

Best Scoring Period
46-60 mins
Most Vulnerable Period
76-90+ mins

First Goal Impact

Scoring First vs Conceding First

Leyton Orient - First Goal Impact 2025/2026

59%
Win rate when scoring first
(17 matches)
18%
Win rate when conceding first
(22 matches)

Tactical Takeaways

  • Half-time vulnerability: Against Plymouth, Orient conceded in added time at the end of the first half (45+1), and although they responded within two minutes to equalise (45+3), that mental pattern — going behind just before the break — is a recurring concern. The psychological damage of conceding late in a half is significant.
  • Second-half collapses are the story of this season: Against Plymouth, the O’s entered half-time level at 1-1 with momentum, only to concede twice in the second period. The podcast commentary after the game described the team looking “ragged and flat” from the restart — the fire “extinguished during the half-time break.” This is not an isolated incident; it is a pattern.
  • Good starts, no killer instinct: Orient dominated the opening exchanges against Plymouth — Dom Ballard headed over, Ollie O’Neill fired wide — but failed to capitalise on their early dominance. An inability to convert early pressure into goals forces the team into chasing games they should be controlling.
  • Set-piece discipline: Four yellow cards in last night’s game (vs Plymouth’s two) is symptomatic of a side that is frustrated and increasingly desperate. Disciplinary issues risk key players being suspended at a critical stage of the season.

Quality of Opposition

Results vs League Position

Leyton Orient - Results by Opposition Quality 2025/2026

vs Top Half (1-12)
W6 D5 L13
0.96 PPG from 24 games
vs Bottom Half (13-24)
W8 D4 L7
1.47 PPG from 19 games

X-axis: Opponent league position (1 = top) | Y-axis: Goal difference

The quality-of-opposition argument provides little comfort for Orient fans. Their sole point in the last five games came from the 0-0 draw at Stockport — a title challenger — which is actually a reasonable result in isolation. But the four defeats include losses to Bolton (mid-table), Doncaster (lower-mid), Port Vale (themselves a relegation candidate) and Plymouth (a side with two defeats in nine but not a top-six team). Crucially, the home defeat to Port Vale on 31st January represents directly dropped points against a side they were competing with for survival. Those are the results that could define Orient’s season.

vs Top Half

0.60 PPG

Tough but not impossible — the Stockport draw is a representative example

vs Bottom Half

0.95 PPG

Failing to consistently beat fellow strugglers is the core of their problem


Discipline Check

Disciplinary Record

Leyton Orient - Disciplinary Record 2025/2026

93
Yellow Cards
2
Red Cards
2.21
Cards/Game

Four yellow cards against Plymouth in a single evening is a red flag. When a team is picking up bookings at that rate, it usually reflects frustration, desperation, or both — and Orient right now have plenty of both. The cumulative yellow card tally is worth watching closely; with 15 games to go, any suspensions at this stage could be damaging. Richie Wellens will need his full complement of players available for what are likely to be tight, scrappy survival battles. A needless dismissal in a six-pointer could be season-defining.


Key Players

Dom Ballard – Striker

Dom Ballard Season Statistics

D. Ballard

Leyton Orient • Attacker

37Appearances
3208Minutes
22Goals
4Assists
6.96Avg Rating
2 / 0Yellow/Red

Includes: Seasons: 2025; Teams: Leyton Orient; Competitions: L1;

Dom Ballard Form Chart

Dominic Ballard - Form Chart

Average Rating: 6.69

Orient’s top scorer this season, Ballard has been their most consistent attacking threat — yet even he is symptomatic of the wider problem. Against Plymouth, he had a gilt-edged early chance, heading from close range after just seven minutes, only to see his attempt sail over the bar. That moment, more than any other, captures Orient’s attacking issue in miniature: the positions are created, the opportunities are found, but they are not converted. With the team struggling to score, Ballard’s goals are carrying an enormous amount of weight. If he hits a dry spell, or picks up an injury, the consequences could be severe. He needs better service, and the team needs others to contribute goals alongside him.

Ollie O’Neill – Midfielder

Ollie O’Neill Season Statistics

Ollie O'Neill

Leyton Orient • M

33Appearances
2391Minutes
4Goals
8Assists
5 / 0Yellow/Red

Includes: Seasons: 2025; Teams: Leyton Orient; Competitions: L1;

O’Neill’s instinctive finish in stoppage time of the first half against Plymouth — a right-footed shot into the bottom right corner from the centre of the box after a cross from James Morris — was a genuine moment of quality in an otherwise dispiriting evening. He also had an earlier effort that went too high, showing a willingness to shoot that this team desperately needs more of. His energy and creativity are bright spots, and the way he responded to going behind to equalise so rapidly showed real character. If Orient are going to fight their way out of trouble, players like O’Neill delivering moments of individual brilliance will be central to it. He looked dangerous in both penalty area areas at times and is one of the few Orient players who can genuinely change a game.

Tobi Oluwayemi – Goalkeeper

Tobi Oluwayemi Season Statistics

T. Oluwayemi

Leyton Orient • Goalkeeper

3Appearances
255Minutes
7Saves
5Goals Conceded
7.10Avg Rating
0 / 0Yellow/Red

Includes: Seasons: 2025; Teams: Leyton Orient; Competitions: L1;

Six saves against Plymouth in a 3-1 defeat is a remarkable individual statistic, and it hints at just how much Orient owe their goalkeeper this season. Had Oluwayemi not been at his best — denying Alex Mitchell’s header in the first half and stopping Matthew Sorinola’s close-range effort later on — this could have been a very different scoreline. He is keeping Orient in games that the outfield players are losing. The clean sheet away at Stockport a fortnight ago was another example of his value. He is the one position on the pitch where Orient look genuinely solid, and keeping him injury-free and confident will be critical in the run-in.


The Road Ahead

Upcoming Fixture Difficulty

Leyton Orient - Upcoming Fixture Difficulty

Average Difficulty (next 3 games): 1.2/5
DateOpponentH/APositionDifficulty
Sat 18 Apr
14:00
RotherhamH23th1
Sat 25 Apr
14:00
BlackpoolA19th1.5
Sat 2 May
14:00
Burton AlbionH18th1

Difficulty: 1 (easiest) - 5 (hardest) | Updated: 17 Apr 2026, 10:00 AM

After the Plymouth defeat, Orient have two more February games that could define the rest of their season. On Saturday they travel to Northampton — described in the podcast aftermath as “a tricky and fiddly fixture to go away to.” The week after brings Barnsley to Brisbane Road on 28th February, live on Sky Sports+. Neither is a fixture they can afford to lose. Northampton away will test their mental resilience in the immediate aftermath of last night’s defeat, and historically Orient have found it difficult to produce an immediate bounce-back response. February ends with a home game — a scenario that should favour them, but given they have just lost at home to Port Vale and Plymouth, even that cannot be taken for granted.

March onwards is when, as the podcast analysis pointed out, “the season feels like you’re in the business end.” By the time spring arrives, Orient will need to have arrested this slide or the situation could become critical. The good news is there are 15 games remaining and, mathematically, they remain well capable of survival. The bad news is that nothing in the data suggests they are currently capable of winning those games at the rate they need to.

Current League Standing

League One Table

League One

PosTeamPWDLGFGAGDPts
1Lincoln42289579364393
2Cardiff422410877433482
3Bolton431916864451973
4Stockport County42218135246671
5Bradford42218135246671
6Stevenage421910134443167
7Luton421810145951864
8Huddersfield431712146657963
9Plymouth42196176658863
10Reading431614136255762
11Wycombe4316121563511260
12Barnsley411413146365-255
13Wigan431413164956-755
14Mansfield Town411315135043754
15Doncaster42158194364-2153
16Peterborough41156206058251
17Leyton Orient43149205766-951
18Burton Albion431312184656-1051
19Blackpool43149205165-1451
20AFC Wimbledon43148214965-1650
21Exeter City431211204755-847
22Rotherham42910233665-2937
23Port Vale40811213054-2435
24Northampton4298253562-2735

← scroll →

Updated: 17 Apr 2026, 10:00 AM


Home vs Away Split

Home vs Away Performance

Leyton Orient - Home vs Away 2025/2026

Home

30 pts from 21 games

Away

21 pts from 22 games

The fact that Orient’s worst results in this run have come at Brisbane Road is particularly alarming. Home advantage is a cornerstone of survival campaigns — teams that stay up typically pick up the majority of their points in front of their own fans. Yet Orient have lost at home to Port Vale and now Plymouth in their last two home games, conceding four goals across those two fixtures. Away from home they drew at Stockport, which is a perfectly respectable result, but that is the outlier. The home form needs to improve dramatically and immediately; Northampton next Saturday is away, but when they return to east London to face Barnsley, they simply must collect three points.


The Verdict

So, is Leyton Orient’s relegation crisis the beginning of the end, or a temporary storm that a squad with genuine quality can weather?

Reasons for Hope

  • 15 games remaining — a full third of the season, so there is genuine time to turn this around
  • January signings (Morris, Forrester, Levitt) are still bedding in and showed flashes of quality even last night
  • Oluwayemi in goal is a genuine asset — 6 saves against Plymouth shows the level he’s operating at
  • Club backing Wellens publicly and showing patience — no managerial instability to add to the chaos
  • A win over Northampton on Saturday could restore confidence rapidly

Reasons for Alarm

  • Conceded 3+ goals on 11 separate occasions this season — a systemic defensive collapse, not occasional bad luck
  • 1 point from 5 games suggests the worst form period of the season is happening right now, at exactly the wrong time
  • xG data shows actual performance matches their league position — they are where they deserve to be
  • Home form has completely broken down — losing at Brisbane Road to relegation rivals is unacceptable
  • Second-half collapses are a recurring pattern, suggesting a fitness, concentration or tactical issue that has not been solved

The uncomfortable truth for Leyton Orient is that this form run is not a blip. This is a team that has conceded three or more goals in more than a third of its matches this season. This is a team whose xG numbers confirm they are getting what they deserve, not being unlucky. The arrival of five new players in January was supposed to stop the rot, and Director of Football Martin Ling has rightly pointed out that Richie Wellens deserves time to integrate them — you cannot expect an immediate transformation. James Morris impressed in the first half against Plymouth, Dylan Levitt looks a promising addition, and Will Forrester showed some decent moments. But “showing promise” does not win games, and Orient need wins right now.

Wellens has the backing of the board, and the public support of the club at the Fan Q&A session was a positive sign of unity. The manager’s approach — saying it how it is, expressing his passion — is valued by those around him, even if his post-match media comments occasionally land awkwardly. But results are the only currency that matters now, and Orient need them urgently. A win at Northampton on Saturday would not just be three points — it would be a lifeline, a statement, and a reminder that this squad can compete.

With 15 games to go, the margin for error is slim but it is not zero. If the January signings click, if O’Neill finds consistent form, if Ballard starts converting the chances he’s getting, and if Oluwayemi continues his fine work in goal, Orient can still pull clear. The question is whether the collective psychological weight of this bad run — now culminating in a drop into the bottom four — will prove too heavy to shake off. Saturday’s trip to Northampton is not just a football match. It is a defining moment for this club’s season.

Final Prediction

Next 5 Games

7–9 pts needed

Season End Points

49–52 pts

Final Position

19th–21st

Bottom Line: Leyton Orient’s season is not over — but it is absolutely on the line. They have the players, the manager and the support to survive. What they don’t yet have is the form, the defensive organisation, or the results. Something has to give at Northampton on Saturday, and it had better be the run.

Tags: Brisbane RoadChampionship Relegation ZoneDom BallardEFL League Onefootball analysisFootball Stats AnalysisLeague OneLeague One 2026League One FormLeague One ResultsLeyton OrientLeyton Orient Form GuideLeyton Orient vs PlymouthRelegation BattleRichie Wellens
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Beyond The Prem

Data-first football writing

This site is a hobby project run by a former healthcare professional and computing graduate who likes football and data. There's no monetisation agenda, no ads, and no ambition to become the next big football media brand.

What there is: ML-backed match previews, honest accountability when the model gets it wrong, and analysis covering the Championship, League One and WSL that tries to be genuinely data-driven rather than just opinion dressed up in numbers.

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