Quakes Host Galaxy in Western Conference Clash as Momentum Tells Contrasting Stories
SJ Earthquakes and LA Galaxy meet on Sunday in a California derby that carries genuine table weight, with the Quakes sitting second in the West and the Galaxy looking to arrest a run of inconsistency that has left them ninth.

There are fixtures where the table tells you everything you need to know, and there are fixtures where the table is almost misleading. The California derby between SJ Earthquakes and LA Galaxy on Sunday 26 July at PayPal Park sits somewhere between those two states, because the gap in standings is real but the recent form data suggests this is considerably more competitive than a second-versus-ninth matchup implies.
Where the Quakes Actually Stand
SJ Earthquakes have constructed one of the better seasons in the Western Conference. Fifteen games played, ten wins, two draws and three defeats, thirty-four goals scored against fifteen conceded, and thirty-two points on the board. That goal difference of plus nineteen is excellent and places them comfortably inside the playoff positions with real breathing room. The underlying structure of that record is a team that has been genuinely productive going forward while maintaining something resembling defensive shape.
The interesting thing is, however, that the recent data paints a slightly different picture. Over their last five games in all contexts, the Earthquakes have managed just one win against two draws and two defeats, scoring nine and conceding nine. That is a sharp regression from the season-long numbers, and the momentum slope across that window sits at a negative reading of 0.27 over ten games overall. The short-term trajectory is downward, which is information worth carrying into this analysis rather than discarding because the season aggregate looks healthy.
What the data actually shows about Earthquakes at home in the last five is a 2-1-2 record with eleven goals scored and six conceded, a clean sheet rate of twenty percent and a both-teams-to-score rate of sixty percent. They are not an impenetrable home side. They create and they concede, which means games at PayPal Park tend to have a particular texture: open, direct, with both sets of forwards finding space. The possession average of twenty-nine percent overall is low enough to suggest this is a team comfortable playing without the ball in long stretches, pressing to win it back rather than controlling through build-up sequences.
The Galaxy's Complicated Reality
LA Galaxy sit ninth in the West with twenty points from fifteen games, a record of five wins, five draws and five defeats, and a goal difference of zero. Those numbers tell you this is a mid-table side in the current moment, but the form data asks you to look more carefully before reaching that conclusion too quickly.
Over their last ten games, Galaxy have produced four wins, three draws and three defeats. Their xG for across that window sits at seven and their xG against at five, which is the one genuinely useful underlying number we have here. Expected goals, for those unfamiliar, measures the quality of chances created and conceded based on where shots were taken from and the circumstances around them. An xG for of seven against an xG against of five over ten matches means Galaxy have been generating better chances than they have been allowing, even if the actual scorelines have not always reflected that. That is a team that may be performing below their underlying quality in terms of results, which is exactly the kind of mispricing the market often fails to account for properly.
The away context specifically is where Galaxy have shown real capacity. In their last five away games, they have won two, drawn one and lost two, but scored eight and conceded eight, with an over 2.5 goals rate of eighty percent and a both-teams-to-score rate of eighty percent as well. The momentum slope in the away context is actually positive at 0.4, which is the strongest directional reading in the entire dataset for either side. Galaxy away from home are not a team shutting up shop and hoping to nick something. They come to play.
The Tactical Question This Derby Poses
The structure of this fixture is genuinely fascinating from an analytical standpoint. You have a home side that sits in a low-possession shape, averaging twenty-nine percent of the ball across their games, which means they are inviting pressure and looking to transition quickly. That suits a Galaxy team that appears, from the underlying numbers, to be generating good quality chances regardless of where they play.
The pressing trigger question here is who initiates the high-tempo sequences. Earthquakes have shown they can be direct and clinical, thirty-four goals in fifteen games is a very healthy return. But Galaxy's xG numbers suggest they are not simply rolling over when teams try to press them. The combination of two teams with high both-teams-to-score rates, over eighty percent for Galaxy away and a hundred percent for Earthquakes in overall last-five context, points firmly toward a game with goals at both ends.
The over 2.5 goals market is where this data set speaks most clearly. Earthquakes have cleared that threshold in sixty to eighty percent of recent games depending on context. Galaxy away have done so in eighty percent of their last five road trips. When two sides with those profiles meet, the sample size is small but the direction is consistent: expect goals, expect both teams involved in the scoring.
The Standings Context
For Earthquakes, three points here would consolidate their second-place position in the West and maintain the points gap on the chasing group. For Galaxy, the maths is straightforward: they need to start converting their underlying performance into results, and a derby win on the road would represent a significant statement about their second-half-of-season intentions. A team generating xG numbers that outperform their actual results is either about to regress further or about to find their level. Regression in football tends to correct in both directions.
The Earthquakes are the better side over the course of this season. That is not a close argument. But the Galaxy carry enough in their away form data and their underlying chance creation numbers to make this competitive, and the open nature of both teams' recent defensive records suggests the margin could be tight even if the Quakes edge it.
This California derby has all the markers of a high-scoring, closely contested fixture where the home advantage matters but does not settle the question before kick-off.
Related: Form: SJ Earthquakes Β· Form: LA Galaxy Β· Head-to-head: SJ Earthquakes vs LA Galaxy
Match data, form summaries, and head-to-head records are sourced from SportSignalsβ proprietary AI analysis engine.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the current league position of SJ Earthquakes and LA Galaxy ahead of this fixture?
SJ Earthquakes sit second in the Western Conference with thirty-two points from fifteen games, recording ten wins, two draws and three defeats. LA Galaxy are ninth in the West with twenty points from fifteen games, with five wins, five draws and five defeats and a goal difference of zero.
What does the recent form suggest about this California derby?
Both sides have shown a strong tendency to be involved in high-scoring games. Earthquakes have recorded a both-teams-to-score rate of one hundred percent across their last five overall games, while Galaxy away from home have seen both teams score in eighty percent of their last five road fixtures. The over 2.5 goals rate for Galaxy away is also eighty percent, which points toward an open and potentially high-scoring derby.
Do LA Galaxy's underlying numbers suggest they are better than their league position indicates?
The available xG data across their last ten games shows Galaxy generating an expected goals total of seven in attack against five conceded, which means they have been creating better quality chances than they have been allowing. A team with those underlying numbers sitting ninth in the table may be performing below their actual level in terms of results, and that gap between process and outcome is worth accounting for when assessing how competitive they are likely to be against the Earthquakes.
