Preview
Wuhan Three Towns vs Hangzhou Greentown prediction time feels like reading two different novels at once: one about survival, one about quiet ambition. They meet on Tuesday, 21 April 2026 at 12:35 GMT (Round 7) at Wuhan Sports Center Stadium, and the mood is clear before the first whistle—Wuhan need points like a striker needs service, while Hangzhou (Zhejiang Professional FC in the official paperwork) arrive looking like a team that has already packed an umbrella for the storm.
Wuhan’s opening to the 2026 season has been bumpy. After six games they sit 14th in the 16-team table with a 1-1-4 record, 8 goals scored and 12 conceded. That’s not a disaster movie yet, but it’s definitely the part where the soundtrack gets tense. Their 4-1 win over Dalian Yingbo proved they can still punch hard, yet dropped points against sides like Shenzhen Peng City and Chongqing Tonglianglong have kept them hovering uncomfortably close to the relegation line.
Hangzhou Greentown, meanwhile, look more settled: 9th place, 2 wins, 2 draws, 2 losses, with a neat 7-6 goal balance. They haven’t been perfect, but they’ve been practical—recent wins over Qingdao Hainiu and Qingdao West Coast suggest they know how to manage games without turning every match into a track meet.
Wuhan’s winter business was built around goals and grit. The headline is Venezuelan striker Jhonder Cádiz, signed for around €2m and already on 3 goals in 470 minutes. That’s a striker’s version of “I’ve unpacked my bags.” Around him, Gustavo Sauer and Kilian Bevis give Wuhan forward options, while Mbouri Basile Yamkam anchors the defensive side of the story. Adriano’s arrival from Santa Clara strengthens midfield control, and defender Tian Ming adds depth.
Hangzhou’s squad looks slightly stronger on paper, too: about €12.823m in total value versus Wuhan’s €9.43m. It’s not everything, but over a long season it often shows up in the small details—better rotation, calmer endings, fewer panic clearances into Row Z.
That last head to head matters. A 0-4 loss tends to linger. Wuhan may treat this like a redemption chapter, but Hangzhou will read it as a reminder: if they keep their structure, chances will come.
Now for the part NerdyTips readers love: how the stats and odds translate into sensible betting tips. Bookmakers currently price a home win at 2.82, the draw at 3.6, and the away win at 2.55—so Hangzhou are the clear favorite, even on the road.
Those picks line up nicely with the match shape our numbers expect. Possession is projected at 46% Wuhan to 54% Hangzhou, and the shot count leans away as well: 10 vs 14, with on-target efforts 2 vs 4. In plain words: Hangzhou should spend more time in the right areas, and create more shots that actually test the keeper.
Corners are estimated at 9 total (4-5), suggesting steady pressure rather than one-way traffic. Cards look mild (2 yellows Wuhan, 1 Hangzhou), which fits a game where Hangzhou try to control tempo while Wuhan chase moments—like that impressive 1-1 draw away at Henan Jianye on 2026-03-21, when they were priced at 7.0 and still found a way to scrap a result.
The expected final score is 1-2, with a half-time prediction of 0-1. It reads like this: Hangzhou start cleaner, Wuhan respond after the break, and then Hangzhou’s extra control finishes the job. If you want a simple angle, the Wuhan Three Towns vs Hangzhou Greentown prediction that best matches both the numbers and the recent head to head is: protect yourself with X2, and consider Over 2.5 if you believe Wuhan’s attacking pieces can turn pressure into at least one goal.
Wuhan Three Towns vs Hangzhou Greentown prediction time feels like reading two different novels at once: one about survival, one about quiet ambition. They meet on Tuesday, 21 April 2026 at 12:35 GMT (Round 7) at Wuhan Sports Center Stadium, and the mood is clear before the first whistle—Wuhan need points like a striker needs service, while Hangzhou (Zhejiang Professional FC in the official paperwork) arrive looking like a team that has already packed an umbrella for the storm.
Wuhan’s opening to the 2026 season has been bumpy. After six games they sit 14th in the 16-team table with a 1-1-4 record, 8 goals scored and 12 conceded. That’s not a disaster movie yet, but it’s definitely the part where the soundtrack gets tense. Their 4-1 win over Dalian Yingbo proved they can still punch hard, yet dropped points against sides like Shenzhen Peng City and Chongqing Tonglianglong have kept them hovering uncomfortably close to the relegation line.
Hangzhou Greentown, meanwhile, look more settled: 9th place, 2 wins, 2 draws, 2 losses, with a neat 7-6 goal balance. They haven’t been perfect, but they’ve been practical—recent wins over Qingdao Hainiu and Qingdao West Coast suggest they know how to manage games without turning every match into a track meet.
Wuhan’s winter business was built around goals and grit. The headline is Venezuelan striker Jhonder Cádiz, signed for around €2m and already on 3 goals in 470 minutes. That’s a striker’s version of “I’ve unpacked my bags.” Around him, Gustavo Sauer and Kilian Bevis give Wuhan forward options, while Mbouri Basile Yamkam anchors the defensive side of the story. Adriano’s arrival from Santa Clara strengthens midfield control, and defender Tian Ming adds depth.
Hangzhou’s squad looks slightly stronger on paper, too: about €12.823m in total value versus Wuhan’s €9.43m. It’s not everything, but over a long season it often shows up in the small details—better rotation, calmer endings, fewer panic clearances into Row Z.
That last head to head matters. A 0-4 loss tends to linger. Wuhan may treat this like a redemption chapter, but Hangzhou will read it as a reminder: if they keep their structure, chances will come.
Now for the part NerdyTips readers love: how the stats and odds translate into sensible betting tips. Bookmakers currently price a home win at 2.82, the draw at 3.6, and the away win at 2.55—so Hangzhou are the clear favorite, even on the road.
Those picks line up nicely with the match shape our numbers expect. Possession is projected at 46% Wuhan to 54% Hangzhou, and the shot count leans away as well: 10 vs 14, with on-target efforts 2 vs 4. In plain words: Hangzhou should spend more time in the right areas, and create more shots that actually test the keeper.
Corners are estimated at 9 total (4-5), suggesting steady pressure rather than one-way traffic. Cards look mild (2 yellows Wuhan, 1 Hangzhou), which fits a game where Hangzhou try to control tempo while Wuhan chase moments—like that impressive 1-1 draw away at Henan Jianye on 2026-03-21, when they were priced at 7.0 and still found a way to scrap a result.
The expected final score is 1-2, with a half-time prediction of 0-1. It reads like this: Hangzhou start cleaner, Wuhan respond after the break, and then Hangzhou’s extra control finishes the job. If you want a simple angle, the Wuhan Three Towns vs Hangzhou Greentown prediction that best matches both the numbers and the recent head to head is: protect yourself with X2, and consider Over 2.5 if you believe Wuhan’s attacking pieces can turn pressure into at least one goal.
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Best Tip odd is moving up from 1.34
X2 -192
Hangzhou to win or draw with odds of -1922 155
Hangzhou is expected to win with odds of 155Over 2.5 -175
At least 3 goals will be scored in the matchYes -200
Both teams are expected to scoreX2&O1.5 -139
Away win/draw and over 1.5 goals
0:1
1:2
|
2
-
1
-
7
|
|
Wuhan T |
28-Mar-25
0:4
| Hangzhou ![]() |
Wuhan T |
18-Oct-24
0:2
| Hangzhou ![]() |
Wuhan T |
05-May-23
0:0
| Hangzhou ![]() |
Wuhan T |
27-Dec-22
2:0
| Hangzhou ![]() |
Wuhan T |
05-Dec-21
2:1
| Hangzhou ![]() |
Hangzhou |
27-Jul-25
3:2
| Wuhan T ![]() |
Hangzhou |
21-May-24
3:1
| Wuhan T ![]() |
Hangzhou |
04-Aug-23
2:1
| Wuhan T ![]() |
Hangzhou |
04-Oct-22
2:1
| Wuhan T ![]() |
| 10 May | D |
Qingdao Y
| 1 |
Wuhan T
| 1 |
| 06 May | L |
Wuhan T
| 1 |
Qingdao J
| 3 |
| 01 May | D |
Tianjin Teda
| 2 |
Wuhan T
| 2 |
| 25 Apr | L |
SHANGHAI S
| 4 |
Wuhan T
| 0 |
| 21 Apr | W |
Wuhan T
| 2 |
Hangzhou
| 0 |
| 17 Apr | L |
Wuhan T
| 0 |
Chengdu B
| 1 |
| 11 Apr | L |
Chongqing
| 2 |
Wuhan T
| 1 |
| 05 Apr | L |
Sichuan J
| 5 |
Wuhan T
| 2 |
| 21 Mar | D |
Henan Jianye
| 1 |
Wuhan T
| 1 |
| 13 Mar | W |
Wuhan T
| 4 |
Dalian Yingbo
| 1 |
| 15 May | D | SHANGHAI S |
2 | Hangzhou |
2 |
| 10 May | D | Hangzhou |
1 | Tianjin Teda |
1 |
| 06 May | W | Yunnan Yukun |
1 | Hangzhou |
2 |
| 02 May | W | Hangzhou |
2 | Sichuan J |
1 |
| 25 Apr | L | Chengdu B |
4 | Hangzhou |
0 |
| 21 Apr | L | Wuhan T |
2 | Hangzhou |
0 |
| 17 Apr | D | Hangzhou |
0 | Beijing |
0 |
| 10 Apr | L | Dalian Z |
3 | Hangzhou |
0 |
| 05 Apr | L | Hangzhou |
0 | Chongqing |
1 |
| 20 Mar | W | Qingdao J |
1 | Hangzhou |
4 |
China - Super League| Team | M | G | P | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Chengdu Better | 12 | 32-10 | 34 |
| 2 |
Chongqing Tongliang | 11 | 15-10 | 20 |
| 3 |
Dalian Zhixing | 12 | 18-23 | 18 |
| 4 |
Yunnan Yukun | 11 | 23-20 | 16 |
| 5 |
Shandong | 11 | 18-16 | 14 |
| 6 |
Qingdao Youth | 12 | 11-18 | 13 |
| 7 |
Shanghai | 11 | 24-17 | 11 |
| 8 |
Beijing Guoan | 12 | 21-18 | 11 |
| 9 |
Hangzhou | 12 | 14-17 | 11 |
| 10 |
Qingdao Jonoon | 12 | 19-19 | 10 |
| 11 |
Sichuan Jiuniu | 12 | 14-21 | 10 |
| 12 |
Henan Jianye | 12 | 12-14 | 9 |
| 13 |
SHANGHAI SIPG | 12 | 19-17 | 8 |
| 14 |
Shenyang Urban | 11 | 8-18 | 7 |
| 15 |
Wuhan Three | 11 | 14-22 | 4 |
| 16 |
Tianjin Teda | 12 | 16-18 | 1 |