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Major League Soccer

Colorado Rapids Host San Diego With Both Sides Desperately Seeking Momentum in MLS

Two teams sitting in the bottom half of their respective conferences meet at Dick's Sporting Goods Park on Thursday, with Colorado's poor recent home form colliding against San Diego's alarming record on the road. Something has to give, and the data tells you exactly where to look.

Colorado Rapids crest
Colorado Rapids
Major League Soccer
vs
01.30 Thursday 23rd July 2026
San Diego crest
San Diego
The Insider
Β· 5 min read
Updated
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There are fixtures in a season that do not carry the glamour of a title race or a cup final, but carry every bit as much consequence. Colorado Rapids versus San Diego, kicking off in the early hours of Thursday 23 July, is precisely that kind of game. Both clubs are operating below where their squads would want to be, both are searching for a pattern of results that gives the season some direction, and both are carrying structural problems that go beyond a single bad week.

Watch this carefully, because the story of this match is not just about two struggling teams. It is about two struggling teams whose weaknesses happen to point directly at each other.

Where Colorado Stand

The Rapids sit eleventh in the Western Conference standings after fifteen games, with five wins, one draw, and nine defeats. Sixteen points from a possible forty-five is not a return that suggests a club in control of its situation. The goals-for column reads twenty-five, which is not catastrophic, but the nine defeats tell you that when Colorado concede, they tend not to find a way back.

Rewind to their last ten matches overall and the picture sharpens. Two wins, one draw, seven defeats. Goals for fourteen, goals against seventeen. A clean sheet percentage of just twenty percent across that window. The home record from the same period offers a fraction more comfort, with two wins, one draw, and three losses from six home games, but the momentum slope for their home form sits at minus 0.49. That is not a team trending upward on its own ground. The last five home results read L, L, L, W, W, D. The wins came in the middle of that run, and they have not won at home since.

The thing nobody is talking about is that Colorado's home defensive record is where the real concern sits. They have kept clean sheets in fewer than seventeen percent of home games across the last ten. That is a coaching issue. Whether it is the defensive shape, the press trigger timing, or the reference points given to the backline when they lose the ball in transition, something in the structure is not holding.

Where San Diego Stand

San Diego arrive in Colorado in tenth position in the Western Conference, with four wins, five draws, and six defeats from fifteen matches. Seventeen points. They are separated from the Rapids by just one point, which underlines how tight the bottom half of the table is and how much a result here matters to both clubs.

Their overall form across the last ten games makes for equally difficult reading. One win, three draws, six defeats. Goals for seventeen, goals against twenty-two. A clean sheet percentage of ten percent. That last number is the one worth sitting with for a moment. San Diego have barely kept a clean sheet all season in recent weeks, and their away form reinforces that entirely. In their last five matches on the road, they have taken zero wins, two draws, and three defeats. They have conceded twelve goals in those five away games. Twelve. Zero clean sheets. Their away momentum slope is flat at zero, which suggests they have stopped getting worse but have not started getting better.

There is an interesting split in San Diego's data, though. Their home form shows a goals-for of eighteen across eight games, with an over-2.5 percentage of 87.5 at home. They can score. The structure that allows them to do that at home does not travel. That is a preparation and game plan issue. The movement patterns they rely on, the space they exploit, the reference points their forwards use, something changes when they go away from home and the numbers reflect it clearly.

The Tactical Collision

What we have, then, is a home side that cannot keep clean sheets against a visiting side that cannot stop conceding on the road. From a coaching perspective, this tells you a great deal about the likely shape of the game.

Colorado will want to establish their home structure early and use the crowd as a trigger for pressing moments. Their goals-for at home across the last ten games reads twelve, which is a reasonable return. They can create. The difficulty is sustaining defensive discipline for ninety minutes, and that is where San Diego, even in poor away form, will find openings if they can move the ball quickly through the lines.

San Diego's best hope is to keep the game open. Their overall last-five BTTS percentage sits at eighty percent, and their over-2.5 rate is the same. If this becomes a cagey, structured affair, Colorado probably shade it on home advantage alone. If it opens up, San Diego's attacking numbers suggest they have the quality to contribute to a high-scoring game even away from home.

Both sides have a BTTS percentage of sixty to sixty-seven percent across their respective last-ten overall windows. The detail that connects both teams is their collective inability to defend. When two leaky defences meet, the default assumption is goals at both ends.

The Bigger Picture

Beyond the ninety minutes, this match carries genuine importance for both clubs' seasons. Colorado at eleven with sixteen points, San Diego at tenth with seventeen, are close enough that a win for either side shifts the dynamic meaningfully. A Rapids win keeps them in contact and gives the home fans something to build on. A San Diego win would be only their second away point-gaining result in the last five road trips and would represent a real shift in momentum.

What this fixture will not produce, based on everything the data tells us, is a clean, controlled performance from either team. The preparation for both sets of coaching staff will be focused on finding the defensive structure that their recent results suggest has been missing. Whoever finds it first will likely win.

The Tip

Both teams to score looks well supported here. Colorado concede in the vast majority of their home games, and San Diego score even when they lose on the road. The over-2.5 market is worth considering, with both sides trending toward open, goal-heavy matches across recent weeks. I would not back a Colorado clean sheet at any price in their current state, and San Diego's defensive record away from home makes a shutout equally unlikely from their end. Both teams to score is the cleaner, more precise read of what the data is pointing toward.

Related: Form: Colorado Rapids Β· Form: San Diego Β· Head-to-head: Colorado Rapids vs San Diego

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

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Colorado Rapids' recent form heading into this match?

Colorado Rapids have won just two of their last ten matches overall, with seven defeats in that run. Their home form over the same period shows two wins, one draw, and three losses, with a clean sheet percentage of less than seventeen percent at home. Their last five results overall read L, L, W, L, L.

How have San Diego performed away from home this season?

San Diego's away form has been poor. In their last five road matches they have taken no wins, two draws, and three defeats, conceding twelve goals and keeping zero clean sheets. Their away momentum slope is flat, suggesting they have not improved their road record in recent weeks.

Is both teams to score a good bet in this fixture?

The data supports it strongly. Colorado have kept clean sheets in fewer than seventeen percent of their recent home games, while San Diego have failed to keep a clean sheet in any of their last five away matches. San Diego's overall BTTS percentage across the last five games is eighty percent, and Colorado's home matches have seen both sides score in over sixty-six percent of games across the last ten. The structural defensive problems on both sides point clearly toward goals at each end.