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2025–26 Port Vale F.C. season
The 2025–26 season is the 114th season in the history of Port Vale Football Club and their first season back in League One since the 2023–24 season, following their promotion from League Two in the preceding season.
| 2025–26 season | ||
|---|---|---|
| Synsol Holdings Limited | ||
| Carol Shanahan | ||
| Darren Moore(until 28 December)Jamie Smith(caretaker manager 28 December – 6 January)Jon Brady(from 6 January) | ||
| Vale Park | ||
| 23rd (42 points) | ||
| Quarter-finals (knocked out by Chelsea) | ||
| Third round(knocked out by Arsenal) | ||
| Quarter-finals(knocked out by Stockport County) | ||
| Kyle John | ||
| League: Devante Cole (6)All: Devante Cole, Ben Waine (8) | ||
| 16,326 vs. Arsenal, 24 September 2025 | ||
| 636 vs. Barnsley, 2 December 2025 | ||
| 7,172 | ||
| 5–1 (twice) | ||
| 7-0 vs. Chelsea, 4 April 2026 | ||
| Home colours |
Away colours | Home colours | Away colours | | Home colours | Away colours | | | | | | | | | |
The 2025–26 season is the 114th season in the history of Port Vale Football Club and their first season back in League One since the 2023–24 season, following their promotion from League Two in the preceding season.
Manager Darren Moore signed nine permanent and three loan players, whilst allowing eight to leave and being forced to sell top-scorer Lorent Tolaj to Plymouth Argyle after a release clause was triggered. They collected just two points from their opening six league games, though they did qualify for the third round of the EFL Cup, where they had a home tie with Arsenal. Vale put in a creditable performance in defeat to Arsenal, whilst claiming three straight league wins at the end of September as new signing Devante Cole hit form immediately. Only one goal scored in four October league games saw the Vale drop into the relegation zone. With one point and zero goals scored in November, the Vale fell to the bottom of the division. Moore left the club with Vale ten points from safety following a 5–0 defeat at Huddersfield Town on Boxing Day. He was succeeded by Jon Brady.
Brady oversaw progress in the cups and trimmed the squad in the January transfer window, though he lost top scorer Devante Cole in a late move. The team were beaten only once in six games in February, though they added only seven points to their tally and remained rooted to the bottom of the table. Despite indifferent league form continuing, Vale defeated Premier League side Sunderland to reach the quarter finals of the FA Cup for only the second time in the club's history.
CEO Matt Hancock said that he believed the club were in a stronger position than when they had last gained promotion ahead of the 2022–23 season. In celebration of the club's 150th anniversary, the home kit was based on the classic strip from the 1953–54 'Iron Curtain' season, in which the club reached the FA Cup semi-finals and conceded just 26 goals throughout a 46-game season. It was also confirmed that the kit would not display a front-of-shirt sponsor to maintain the retro look. The away kit was based on that worn by the 1958–59 title-winning team. The first signing of the summer was right-sided defender Jordan Gabriel, who joined on an initial two-year contract after being released by Blackpool. Attacking midfielder Rico Richards, who had played 27 league games on loan at Vale the previous season, was signed to a two-year deal after being released by Aston Villa. He would later join League Two side Walsall on loan for the season. Liam Gordon, a 26-year-old left-back capped at international level by Guyana, then chose to leave Walsall to sign for Vale on a two-year deal. Midfielder Jordan Shipley also signed a two-year contract after being released by relegated Shrewsbury Town. Bookmakers had the Vale pegged as relegation strugglers, though supporters were optimistic of a mid-table finish. The fifth summer signing was announced as 26-year-old central defender Cameron Humphreys, who rejected a contract offer from Rotherham United to join Vale on a two-year deal. The club ended June by announcing the signings of Slovak goalkeeper Marko Maroši and New Zealand international forward Ben Waine, who had been released by Cambridge United and Plymouth Argyle respectively, both signing for Vale on two-year deals.
The season opened with a 2–1 defeat at Rotherham United as the Vale were two goals and one man down on 32 minutes after Jaheim Headley was sent off for a knee-high challenge; Vale looked stronger after three half-time changes and a switch away from the 3–4–3 formation. On 7 August, Darren Moore signed 22-year-old Gambian striker Mo Faal on a season-long loan from Wrexham. Later that day, Vale picked up their first point of the season after playing out a 0–0 draw at home to Cardiff City. The following week, on 11 August, Vale signed 25-year-old Australian international goalkeeper Joe Gauci on a season-long loan from Aston Villa, with Moore hoping to provide "strong competition in the goalkeeping department" in the absence of veteran stopper Ben Amos through injury. Another clean sheet and point were gained at Burton Albion five days later, despite captain George Byers being sent off after 15 minutes for a strong challenge on Charlie Webster. The club appealed the red card, however, the original decision was upheld by an FA Regulatory Commission. Vale were heading to a one nil home victory over Stevenage until they conceded two Jamie Reid goals after 87 minutes to lose the game. They then lost top-scorer Lorent Tolaj to league rivals Plymouth Argyle after Argyle activated a "substantial release clause" in his Vale contract. This fee was reported to be £1.2 million. A 1–0 home defeat to Doncaster Rovers followed as the visitors took control of the game in the second half. Vale went on to bring 19-year-old forward Dajaune Brown on loan from Derby County. He came off the bench as Vale fell to a 1–0 defeat at Reading, the hosts taking all three points with a 66th-minute Paddy Lane strike.
Moore made two signings on transfer deadline day, bringing in experienced striker Devante Cole on a free transfer from West Bromwich Albion and midfielder George Hall from Birmingham City for an undisclosed fee. Cole provided an assist and scored on his debut at home to Leyton Orient on 6 September, though could not prevent his new side slipping to another defeat at Charlie Wellens scored the winning goal five minutes into stoppage-time for his father's team. Richie Wellens sympathised with Moore, saying he must have run over a black cat. The first league win was achieved with a 2–0 victory at Exeter City, as the new strike partnership of Cole and Paton secured a goal each after capitlising on mistakes by the home team. A second win followed at home to Mansfield Town, who had their captain Ryan Sweeney sent off after 14 minutes, though it took a stoppage-time Ronan Curtis penalty to secure the three points and Moore had some "choice words" for his players in the dressing room for conceding a sloppy goal. A 2–0 victory at Barnsley secured the Vale a third consecutive win in the league and a solid performance ensured that Gauci did not have a save to make throughout.
The winning run was halted by Northampton Town, who held the Valiants to a goalless draw at Vale Park on 4 October. Vale gained a point on the road seven days later as Cole struck an equaliser four minutes from full-time to prevent former Valiant Antwoine Hackford from winning three points for AFC Wimbledon. With the club facing an injury crisis in the wing-back position, Moore signed 34-year-old free agent Marvin Johnson to a short-term contract. They slipped to a 1–0 defeat at Wigan Athletic despite having a man advantage for the entire second half after Dara Costelloe was sent off for a high foot. A 3–0 home defeat to league leaders Stockport County in front of the television cameras left Vale in the relegation zone.
On 8 November, Vale fell to a 4–0 defeat at Bolton Wanderers despite having had a bright start to the match. The run of defeats came to an end with a goalless draw at home to Wycombe Wanderers. However, a 1–0 home defeat to Plymouth Argyle, the goal scored by Tolaj, saw Vale replace Plymouth at the bottom of the division and supporters called for Darren Moore to be sacked. Matt Hancock gave a lengthy interview backing Moore, saying that the board saw "signs that we can win football games". Jayden Stockley told the media that the players had organised a meeting with Moore and the coaching staff to discuss how to improve performances on the pitch. A 1–0 defeat at Lincoln City followed, a club record sixth consecutive league game without a goal scored.
On 13 December, Vale came from a goal down to lead 2–1 at Luton Town, only to end the game with a point following a Luton equaliser. Ben Amos made only his second league appearance of the season following back-to-back clean sheets in the cup competitions, whilst Ben Waine scored in his third straight game after also having a run of success in the cups. Waine's strike ended Vale's club record time of consecutive league time without a goal at 9 hours and 46 minutes. They then slipped to a 1–0 defeat at home to Peterborough United as Harry Leonard scored a late goal following a tight game. This equalled a club record of five home league games without scoring a goal. They travelled to Huddersfield Town on Boxing Day and were taken apart by five goals to nil, their heaviest defeat of the season. This proved to be the end for Darren Moore, with Jamie Smith being put in caretaker charge on 28 December. Smith took charge of a 1–0 defeat at Bradford City the following day.
Vale started 2026 with a 5–1 win at Blackpool after the hosts were reduced to 10 men just before half-time and proved unable to hold their one-goal lead. Ironically, the game also saw them extend into a club record 471 minutes without a home league goal and ended with them scoring five goals in one half of a league game for the first time since December 1960. Former Northampton Town manager Jon Brady was appointed as the club's new head coach on 6 January. Ronan Curtis left the club shortly afterwards on an undisclosed transfer to Plymouth Argyle. Vale initially looked strong at Mansfield Town on 17 January, though conceded two goals early in the second half and went on to lose the game by three goals to nil. The club brought in 23-year-old winger Ethon Archer on loan from Luton Town. The club celebrated their 150th anniversary with a 3–1 home defeat to Exeter City as yet again a promising start turned into a complete collapse once the opposition opened the scoring. Pundit Adam Yates commented that in the match "every single trait you would look for from a player was a zero out of 10". Brady brought in Tyler Magloire, a centre-back who played for him at Northampton Town, who had started the campaign with non-League side Workington. The club's top-scorer, Devante Cole, was sold to Luton Town on 31 January. Despite this, the team won at Leyton Orient, with the game's only goal coming from John in the second minute.
The club brought in defender Eli Campbell and forward Martin Sherif on loan from Everton. Former Premier League striker Andre Gray also came in on a free transfer following a spell with Turkish club Fatih Karagümrük. Vale then fell to a narrow 1–0 home defeat by AFC Wimbledon, in a game of few chances. They then drew 2–2 at home with Burton Albion, with Jake Beesley scoring a brace to equalise twice for the visitors. Following this, Brady signed two players from free agency: 33-year-old Cuba international winger Onel Hernández and 31-year-old midfielder Grant Ward. Stockley put the Vale ahead at Stevenage, though the hosts soon came back and won the match by two goals to one in a game married by a serious injury to goalscorer Harry Cornick. Gray had an equalising goal ruled out just before half-time in a decision that Brady said "for the life of me I don't understand it". Sherif then scored on his home debut to earn a 1–1 draw with Reading. Brady came away from former club Northampton Town with three points, with Stockley scoring the only goal of the game in first half stoppage-time as the home support booed their manager Kevin Nolan. Vale then picked up another point, drawing 1–1 at home with Luton Town.
On 11 March, Vale lost one of their rearranged games by two goals to nil at home to Bradford City, after which Brady admitted the scoreline could have been much worse. A series of illnesses saw a patched-up squad take on Huddersfield Town and hold the visitors to a goalless draw. Brady also labelled the Vale Park pitch a "joke" that was damaging his players following weeks of extremely poor surface as summer improvements to the pitch backfired and caused the surface to regress in poor weather. They twice lost the lead to fall to a 3–2 defeat at Blackpool. They took the lead against Bolton Wanderers and held on to a 1–0 win as the team played to the best of their abilities. However, they returned to losing ways with a 1–0 defeat at Doncaster Rovers. A heavy 4–0 loss at Wycombe Wanderers followed. Brady said the performance was "unacceptable" and explained that he had played Ben Garrity up front as with Waine on international duty no other striker at the club had the necessary work rate to start the game.
On 7 April, Vale recorded a 1–0 home win over Rotherham United to bring themselves within three points of the visitors, having successfully defended a one-goal lead gained through a sixth-minute Ryan Croasdale strike. The following week, Gauci saved a penalty to preserve a clean sheet in a goalless draw at home to Barnsley, which was enough to lift Vale off the bottom of the table for the first time since mid-November. Brady went on to criticise fans who booed the team at the full-time whistle, saying the players had made great efforts and that fans who wanted to boo should stay away. Just two days later, Vale won 3–1 at Peterborough United, with Archer scoring two goals form direct free kicks. A goalless draw at Wigan Athletic then left them needing to win all their four games to stand a chance at survival. A 1–0 defeat at Cardiff City on 22 April relegated Vale with three games left to play. Vale conceded within three minutes at Plymouth Argyle, though the home goalkeeper unnecessarily got himself sent off only two minutes later, and Plymouth went on to win 2–1 despite the man disadvantage. Vale went on to record a surprise 2–1 victory at play-off hopefuls Stockport County after heading into an early two-goal lead.
The club's budget was speculated to be in the lower mid-table range. The club made over £1 million in prize money and TV revenue from their cup runs.
Vale were drawn at home to the lowest-ranked team in the first round of the FA Cup, Maldon & Tiptree of the Isthmian League North Division. They fell behind after six minutes but quickly recovered and finished 5–1 winners, with both Paton and Cole claiming braces. They defeated League Two side Bristol Rovers by a goal to nil. This was the first time they had beaten a team managed by former Vale boss Darrell Clarke in nine attempts. Brady first match in charge at Vale Park was a 1–0 win over League Two club Fleetwood Town that took the Valiants into the fourth round. They had a home tie with Championship club Bristol City in the fourth round and took them to extra-time, where Waine scored the game's only goal to take Port Vale into the fifth round. Yet another home tie came just five days later in the fifth round, against Premier League Sunderland, and again Waine scored the game's only goal to take Vale into the quarter-finals for only the second time in the club's history. It was at the quarter-finals stage that FIFA Club World Cup champions Chelsea eased to a 7–0 victory at Stamford Bridge, with Jorrel Hato opening the scoring in the second minute.
Vale won 1–0 at League One rivals Blackpool in the first round of the EFL Cup, with Faal scoring on his debut, despite Moore making nine changes. They went on to defeat Championship club Birmingham City in the following round, with Headley scoring the only goal of the game. It was the club's first win away at Championship opposition in 15 years. Vale hosted Premier League giants Arsenal in the third round and put in a highly creditable performance in a 2–0 defeat, earning praise from both Moore and Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta.
In the EFL Trophy, they were drawn in a group with Accrington Stanley (League Two), Fleetwood Town (League Two), and Leeds United U21 (Academy). The Leeds youth team were dispatched by a 4–1 scoreline as a strong Vale team spread the goals amongst them. Late goals from Hall and Faal were enough to secure victory at Accrington Stanley. They stormed to a 5–0 home win over Barnsley in the first knockout stage of the competition, making a mockery of their run of six league games without scoring. Moore said the victory showed how "together" the squad was. It was the first time the club had made it to the third round of the EFL Cup, FA Cup and EFL Trophy in the same season. They travelled to league rivals Bolton Wanderers in the following round and reached the quarter-finals with a late Ben Waine goal. The cup run came to a halt with a four goal home defeat by Stockport County, with Brady furious at his team for a second-half collapse.
Draw Loss Fixtures
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As of match played 28 April 2026 Key to positions: GK – Goalkeeper; DF – Defender; MF – Midfielder; FW – Forward
As of match played 28 April 2026
| Place | Position | Nation | Number | Name | EFL League One | FA Cup | EFL Cup | EFL Trophy | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FW | England | 44 | Devante Cole | 6 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 |
| – | FW | New Zealand | 19 | Ben Waine | 3 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 8 |
| 3 | FW | Ireland | 17 | Ruari Paton | 1 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 6 |
| 4 | MF | England | 18 | Ryan Croasdale | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| 5 | FW | England | 11 | Ethon Archer | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| – | FW | Ireland | 11 | Ronan Curtis | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| – | FW | Gambia | 36 | Mo Faal | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| – | FW | England | 9 | Jayden Stockley | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| – | FW | Jamaica | 10 | Dajaune Brown | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 3 |
| – | DF | England | 5 | Connor Hall | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| – | DF | England | 33 | George Hall | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 12 | DF | England | 3 | Jaheim Headley | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| – | DF | England | 6 | Jordan Gabriel | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| — | FW | Netherlands | 21 | Martin Sherif | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| – | MF | England | 26 | Jordan Shipley | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 16 | MF | Scotland | 7 | George Byers | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| – | DF | England | 22 | Jesse Debrah | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| – | DF | England | 25 | Cameron Humphreys | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| – | DF | England | 24 | Kyle John | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| – | FW | England | 23 | Jack Shorrock | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| – | FW | Switzerland | 10 | Lorent Tolaj | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| – | MF | England | 12 | Rhys Walters | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| TOTALS | 36 | 9 | 2 | 15 | 63 |
As of match played 25 April 2026
Sourced from Soccerway.
| End of Season Awards | Winner |
|---|---|
| Player of the Year | Kyle John |
| Young Player of the Year | George Hall |
| Players' Player of the Year | Connor Hall |
| Supporter Club Player of the Season | Kyle John |
| Goal of the Season | Ben Waine (vs Sunderland, 8 March 2026) |
| Top Goalscorer | Ben Waine |
| Academy Player of the Season | Charlie Bussell |
| PFA Community Champion | Jayden Stockley |
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