Charlotte's Home Comfort Against Atlanta United's Travelling Misery: MLS Preview, 23 July 2026
Charlotte host a deeply troubled Atlanta United side at Bank of America Stadium, with the visitors arriving as one of the Eastern Conference's most worrying teams. Rafael Mbeki examines what the form tells us about a match that could reveal much about both clubs' ambitions for the second half of the season.

Last updated 2 July 2026. There are matches in football that arrive without great fanfare, without the noise of a rivalry or the weight of a final, and yet they carry their own quiet significance. Charlotte versus Atlanta United on the evening of Thursday 23 July is precisely that kind of fixture. Two clubs from the same region, separated by a table that tells rather different stories, meeting at a moment when both need something from the game, though for very different reasons.
Where Charlotte Stand
Charlotte sit sixth in their conference after fifteen matches, with six wins, three draws and six defeats. Twenty-one points from a possible forty-five is not the return of a team with designs on the top of the table, but it is the return of a team that remains very much in contention for what matters at this stage of an MLS season. What interests me about Charlotte is not their position but their character, and their character is most visible when they play at home.
In their last ten home matches, Charlotte have won six, drawn two and lost two. Nineteen goals scored at home in that window, nine conceded. That is the record of a team that understands what it means to defend their own territory. The crowd, the familiarity of the pitch, the rhythm of playing in front of people who believe in you, these things matter. What people do not understand is how much the home environment shapes the way a team moves, the tempo they set, the confidence with which they receive the ball under pressure.
Their last five home results read: two wins, one draw, two defeats. That slight dip is worth noting, and their home momentum slope has ticked upward recently, which suggests the difficult patch may already be passing. Overall in their last five matches across all venues, they have scored six and conceded five, a reminder that Charlotte can be vulnerable when the defensive organisation wavers. But here, at home, against a visitor as fragile as Atlanta United, the conditions favour them.
The Atlanta United Problem
Atlanta United arrive in North Carolina as the fourteenth-placed side in their conference, with three wins, two draws and nine defeats from fourteen matches. Eleven points. Fourteen goals scored. Twenty-three conceded. These are the numbers of a team in genuine difficulty, and I say that not to be cruel but because the numbers themselves are telling a story that deserves to be read clearly.
Away from home, Atlanta have been particularly difficult to watch. In their last ten away fixtures, they have managed one win, one draw and four defeats across the six recorded in that window, scoring just three goals and conceding eight. Their away form string over the last five reads: loss, draw, win, loss, loss. They have not kept a single clean sheet on the road in recent memory, and the goals against column in those away fixtures is a concern that goes beyond mere tactical adjustment.
What strikes me about Atlanta's situation is that it is not simply a crisis of results. It appears to be a crisis of confidence, and confidence away from home is the most fragile thing in football. In my time playing across four leagues, I saw teams that were transformed by their own stadium, by the familiarity and the noise and the expectation, and then became almost unrecognisable versions of themselves when asked to perform in someone else's environment. Atlanta, right now, have that look about them.
Their overall last five form, across all venues, shows two wins, one draw and two defeats, with seven scored and seven conceded. There is clearly some attacking intent when they feel comfortable, but that comfort seems to desert them the moment they travel. Their overall momentum slope sits at a deeply concerning negative figure, suggesting the recent results have not arrested the decline so much as interrupted it briefly.
Goals and the Nature of This Fixture
Both teams, despite their contrasting situations, share a tendency toward matches that produce goals. Charlotte's home games have seen both teams score in sixty percent of recent fixtures, with that same proportion going over two and a half goals. Atlanta's away matches, while low-scoring in total, have still seen both teams find the net in a reasonable proportion of encounters.
What people do not understand is that a team in poor form does not necessarily become mean and defensive. Sometimes a struggling side becomes erratic, conceding because their defensive shape deteriorates under pressure and scoring because desperation creates its own kind of attacking energy. Atlanta have enough attacking quality to cause Charlotte moments of discomfort, even in a match they are likely to lose.
Charlotte's clean sheet percentage at home, thirty percent over the last ten, tells us they are not a side that shuts games down quietly. They score, they concede, they play a game that breathes. Against an Atlanta side that concedes with some regularity even away from home, the conditions are in place for an open and rather watchable evening of football.
The Wider League Picture
The conference table at this stage of the season has a familiar MLS quality to it, a compression of clubs between third and tenth position where a run of three wins can change everything and a run of three defeats can make the playoff picture suddenly uncomfortable. Charlotte, in sixth, are not under immediate pressure but they are not safe from it either. A home win here would not only consolidate their position but send a signal about their intentions for the rest of the campaign.
Atlanta, in fourteenth, need points wherever they can find them. But their away record suggests this is not the night they find them. The beautiful game does not always reward the beautiful team, but it does, eventually, tell the truth about a team's quality. Right now, the truth about Atlanta United on their travels is not a comfortable one.
A Word on What to Watch
For those who appreciate the craft of football beyond results, there is still something worth watching in a match like this. How does Charlotte's attacking play develop when they sense a vulnerable opponent? Do they find the intelligence to vary the tempo, to switch the point of attack, to find space in ways that go beyond the obvious? And can Atlanta find any moments of genuine quality away from home, those flickers of creativity that remind you a club has talent even when the results are absent? Those are the questions that will make Thursday evening worth your attention.
Related: Form: Charlotte ยท Form: Atlanta United ยท Head-to-head: Charlotte vs Atlanta United
Match data, form summaries, and head-to-head records are sourced from SportSignalsโ proprietary AI analysis engine.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Charlotte's recent home form ahead of the Atlanta United match?
Charlotte have been strong at home over the last ten matches, recording six wins, two draws and two defeats, scoring nineteen goals and conceding nine. Their last five home results show two wins, one draw and two losses, with a positive momentum trend suggesting they may be emerging from a brief difficult patch.
How are Atlanta United performing away from home this season?
Atlanta United's away form has been very poor. In their last ten away fixtures, they have won just once, drawing once and losing four times across six recorded results, scoring only three goals and conceding eight. They have not kept a clean sheet on the road in recent games, and their overall league standing of fourteenth with eleven points reflects a team in real difficulty.
Is this match likely to produce goals?
The form data suggests goals are quite probable. Charlotte's home matches have seen both teams score in sixty percent of recent fixtures, with the same proportion going over two and a half goals. Atlanta, despite their poor overall record, have scored in both their home and away matches with reasonable frequency, though their away games tend to be lower-scoring affairs. A competitive, open match is a reasonable expectation.
