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San Jose Earthquakes Win 3-1 at Portland: A Statement From the West's In-Form Visitors

San Jose Earthquakes delivered a commanding away performance at Providence Park, defeating Portland Timbers 3-1 to continue one of MLS's most impressive road records of the 2025 season. For Portland, the result deepened a troubling run of form that leaves them marooned in the lower reaches of their conference.

Portland Timbers crest
Portland Timbers
Major League Soccer
1:3
Full Time01.30 Sunday 24th May 2026
SJ Earthquakes crest
SJ Earthquakes
The Connoisseur
· 5 min read
Updated

There are evenings in football when the scoreline is not merely a result but a verdict. San Jose Earthquakes' 3-1 victory at Portland told you something about both teams that no amount of optimistic framing could obscure. The Earthquakes arrived at Providence Park as genuine travellers, a side that has learned how to win away from home with the kind of regularity that separates contenders from the merely hopeful. Portland, by contrast, looked like a team still searching for the version of itself that felt capable.

Portland's Home Comfort Offers No Shelter

What makes this defeat particularly difficult for Timbers supporters to absorb is the context. At home this season, Portland had been one of the more productive sides in their conference, winning three of their last five at Providence Park, scoring freely and creating the kind of open, expressive football that their supporters have come to expect. Fourteen goals scored in five home games is not a small number. It speaks to attacking intent, to a team willing to commit men forward and trust in the quality of their front players.

And yet, San Jose came and dismantled the evening with a clarity that was impossible to ignore. What people do not understand is that good home form can become a liability when it encourages a team to play in a way their opponents have specifically prepared to exploit. A side that scores freely also concedes. Portland's home record of six goals against in five games is not especially alarming in isolation, but against a visiting team carrying genuine quality and purpose, those spaces between the lines become invitations.

The Earthquakes took those invitations. They scored three. Portland managed one. The gap in the final score was honest.

San Jose's Away Form Is Not an Accident

Six wins from ten away games in 2025. Nineteen goals scored on the road. A goal difference that speaks of a team not merely surviving away from home but genuinely thriving. These are not the numbers of a team getting lucky. They are the numbers of a side with a clear understanding of how to play without the ball, how to absorb pressure, and how to punish the moments when space opens up.

In my time as a player, I learned very quickly that the best away sides share a particular quality, a collective intelligence about when to defend and when to strike. You see it in the timing of their transitions, in the way they hold their shape when the home crowd is loudest, and in the composure they bring to their finishing when chances arrive. San Jose, on this evidence, possess all three of those qualities in some measure.

Their overall record of ten wins from fifteen games, with thirty-four goals scored and only fifteen conceded, places them second in their conference. That is not a coincidence. That is the product of a team with genuine craft in how they approach each match.

A Season Unravelling in Portland

For Portland Timbers, the picture is considerably more sombre. Thirteen position in the standings after fourteen games played, four wins, two draws and eight defeats, twenty-two goals scored against twenty-eight conceded. The gap between their home quality and their overall consistency is one of the more puzzling features of their campaign.

Their last five games overall read as three losses, one draw and one win. A momentum slope that continues to trend downward. The beautiful game does not always reward the beautiful team, and Portland are discovering that truth in the most uncomfortable way. They have the possession numbers of a side that controls matches, fifty-seven percent on average, but controlling possession and controlling outcomes are very different things.

What I find genuinely concerning, not merely frustrating, is the clean sheet record. Portland have kept a clean sheet in just ten percent of their last ten games overall. That means the attacking players must score twice, sometimes three times, simply to guarantee a point. That is an exhausting way to play football, week after week. It places enormous psychological weight on the forward line, and eventually that weight shows.

Both Teams to Score, and Then Some

The pre-match signals identified the likelihood of goals from both sides, and the final scoreline confirmed it. Both teams to score has been a near-constant feature of Portland's home games this season, with eighty percent of their last five home matches producing goals at both ends. San Jose, meanwhile, have had both teams score in ninety percent of their last ten games overall. When two sides with that kind of profile meet, a single-goal game was always going to be the least likely outcome.

Four goals across the ninety minutes was the natural expression of what these two teams are. San Jose brought their finishing. Portland brought their openness. The combination produced exactly the kind of match the numbers suggested it would.

What Comes Next for Portland

Portland Timbers are a club with genuine quality in their squad and a home record that suggests they can beat most teams in this league on their day. But a season is not built on home days alone. Their away record of one win, one draw and three losses in their last five on the road tells a different story entirely, a story of a team that loses its shape and its belief when the crowd and the comfort of Providence Park are absent.

The work ahead of their coaching staff is clear enough. The principles that produce fourteen goals in five home games must somehow be made portable, must survive the journey to hostile environments. Until that happens, Portland will continue to find themselves in the position they occupied on this night, watching a well-organised, well-drilled opponent take their chances and their three points, and wondering how a team that plays such attractive football finds itself so far from where it ought to be.

San Jose leave Portland with something more valuable than three points. They leave with confirmation of their own quality. That, in a long season, is not a small thing at all.

Frequently Asked Questions

What was the final score between Portland Timbers and SJ Earthquakes?

San Jose Earthquakes won 3-1 away at Portland Timbers in this MLS 2025 fixture, played on 24 May 2026.

How has San Jose Earthquakes' away form been in the 2025 MLS season?

San Jose have been exceptional on the road in 2025, winning six of their last ten away games and scoring nineteen goals in those matches. It is one of the strongest away records in the league.

Where do Portland Timbers sit in the MLS standings after this defeat?

Portland Timbers are positioned thirteenth in their conference standings after fourteen games, with four wins, two draws and eight defeats, accumulating fourteen points from a possible forty-two.