SportSignals
World Cup 2026Group stage · Matchday 3Today: 6 matchesNext: Panama v England · 22:00Full schedule →
Major League Soccer

Inter Miami's Perfect Away Run Meets a Montréal Side Running Out of Road

Inter Miami arrive in Montréal on the back of five consecutive away wins, while CF Montréal are a team in genuine structural trouble, conceding freely and losing ground in the Eastern Conference standings.

CF Montréal crest
CF Montréal
Major League Soccer
vs
23.30 Saturday 25th July 2026
Inter Miami crest
Inter Miami
The Analyst
· 5 min read
Updated
18+. These predictions are for entertainment purposes only. You can lose money. Please gamble responsibly. begambleaware.org GambleAware

There are mismatches in football, and then there are fixtures where the data tells you almost everything you need to know before a ball is kicked. Saturday's meeting between CF Montréal and Inter Miami at Stade Saputo is one of the latter. The numbers behind this fixture point firmly in one direction, and the interesting thing is that the scale of the gap between these two sides is larger than the standings column might initially suggest.

Where Montréal Are Right Now

CF Montréal sit twelfth in their conference with 14 points from 14 games, which means they have won four and lost eight. That is a difficult position in its own right, but the underlying numbers make it look worse. Their xG figures across their last ten home games show them generating just 4 expected goals while conceding 6, which means the actual scoreline of 10 goals for and 7 against at home is flattered by some conversion above expectation. In simple terms, Montréal have been creating fewer high-quality chances than their goals suggest, and that is the kind of thing that corrects itself over time.

Away from home, Montréal have been in serious difficulty. Their last five away fixtures have produced zero wins, four losses, and a goals-against tally of 16. Every single one of those five games has gone over 2.5 goals, and they have failed to keep a clean sheet in any of them. Their away form string reads DLLLL, and their away BTTS rate sits at 80 per cent. The structure that allows a team to be hard to beat on the road simply does not appear to be there. Their possession average away from home sits at 47 per cent, which is respectable, but with only 11 shots per game and a goals-against average that works out at 3.2 per game over that last five, they are not converting territorial presence into defensive solidity.

The injury situation adds a further layer of concern. Montréal are carrying three players on the injury list, including one long-term absence that has been ongoing since February and a major injury absence since April, both with no expected return date. A third player with a moderate injury has also been out since May. The cumulative effect of extended absences on a squad's shape and cohesion is significant, and three months of disruption in the build-up phase and defensive structure takes time to resolve even when players return.

Inter Miami's Form Is Not a Small Sample

Inter Miami come into this game second in their conference with 31 points from 15 games. Their overall last-ten record of six wins, three draws and one loss is strong, but what stands out in the context of this fixture is specifically their away form. Over their last ten away games, Miami have won seven and drawn two without losing once. Over the last five away games, that becomes five wins from five, scoring 17 goals and conceding 9.

The interesting thing is that their momentum slope in the last five overall games is 0.6, which is the highest figure in the data for any team across any window. That is not a team that is coasting or managing form. Miami are trending upward. Their overall last-ten shows them scoring 30 goals against 20 conceded, which gives them the kind of attacking output that punishes defensive fragility very quickly. Their BTTS rate sits at 80 per cent and their over 2.5 percentage at 70 per cent, which means this is a team that tends to be involved in high-scoring games regardless of venue.

The one caveat worth noting is that Miami's clean sheet percentage, even while winning away games, is only 20 per cent across the last five away matches. They concede. They just score more. Against a Montréal side that generates some attacking output even in difficult games, this fixture has the structural profile of one that produces goals at both ends.

The Market Angle

The odds data is not available in the data sheet, so specific price references are not possible here. What the data does allow is a clear articulation of where the value conversation should be focused. Montréal's home record is 3 wins, 1 draw and 2 losses in their last six home games, which gives them a surface level of credibility as a home side. That 50 per cent over 2.5 rate at home and the 50 per cent BTTS rate also suggest their home games are not entirely one-sided. But the xG figures tell a different story. They are underperforming the quality of chances they are creating and allowing, which means a correction is possible.

The goals market looks genuinely interesting here. Montréal's away BTTS and over rates are both extreme, and Miami's general tendency is to be involved in open games. The combination of a leaky home defence, a high-scoring away side, and a visiting team on a momentum slope of 0.6 points toward this being a game with goals in it. Both teams to score and over 2.5 goals both carry logical structural support from the data.

On the result market, the weight of evidence sits firmly with Miami. A team that has not lost away in ten attempts, that is scoring at more than three goals per away game across their last five, visiting a home side with a goal difference of minus 9 for the season and three key injury absences, is not a team to argue against without very compelling reason.

What to Watch

The shape question for Montréal is whether they can impose any defensive structure that disrupts Miami's transition play. Their last-five form string overall reads DLDWL, which shows they are capable of a result but not consistently. Miami's last-five overall string reads WWWWL, with that one loss seemingly an outlier in a run of dominant form.

The pressing trigger for Montréal will likely come from trying to disrupt Miami's build-up play and force mistakes in midfield, because sitting deep and absorbing pressure has not worked for them over this run. The problem is that executing a high press requires the kind of structural cohesion that extended injury absences tend to undermine. Miami, meanwhile, have shown over ten away games that they can adapt their approach regardless of what the home side tries to impose.

This is a fixture where the data points clearly rather than narrowly. Inter Miami are the better-performing side by a significant margin, their away form is exceptional, and they are visiting a Montréal team that is structurally fragile and injury-affected. The interesting question is not really whether Miami win, but how many goals the game produces, and the answer to that question, based on both sides' underlying numbers, is likely to be several.

Related: Form: CF Montréal · Form: Inter Miami · Head-to-head: CF Montréal vs Inter Miami

Match data, form summaries, and head-to-head records are sourced from SportSignals’ proprietary AI analysis engine.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Inter Miami's recent away form heading into this fixture?

Inter Miami have been exceptional away from home, winning seven of their last ten away games without a single defeat. Over the last five away matches specifically, they have won all five, scoring 17 goals and conceding 9. Their overall momentum slope over the last five games is 0.6, the strongest figure in the available data.

Are CF Montréal carrying any injuries for this match?

Yes, Montréal have three players on the injury list. One has been absent since February with a long-term injury and has no expected return date. A second suffered a major injury in April and is also listed as out with no return date given. A third has been out with a moderate injury since May. The cumulative effect of these absences on their defensive shape and build-up structure has been a factor in their difficult recent form.

Is there value in the goals markets for CF Montréal vs Inter Miami?

The structural case for goals is strong. Montréal's last five away games have all gone over 2.5 goals, with a BTTS rate of 80 per cent, and their home over 2.5 and BTTS rates both sit at 50 per cent. Miami's away BTTS rate over ten games is 77.78 per cent and their over 2.5 rate is 66.67 per cent. Both sides tend to be involved in games where goals flow, which makes the goals markets a logical area of focus for this fixture.