Austin FC welcome Sporting Kansas City to Texas on Sunday morning, 17 May 2026, in an MLS meeting that already feels pretty important for both clubs. Austin are sitting 13th on 14 points, still trying to drag themselves towards the playoff conversation, while Sporting Kansas City are down in 15th with only eight points and a lot of chasing to do. This isn’t just about three points. It’s about stopping the slide before it becomes a problem that’s hard to fix.
For Austin, Nico Estévez will want a reaction after that ugly 5-0 defeat at San Diego FC on 14 May. Sporting KC arrive with a little more bounce after beating LA Galaxy 3-1 at home on the same night, but Raphael Wicky’s side have already spent much of the season firefighting. The margins in the Western Conference are already starting to matter. Miss this chance, and the pressure ramps up fast.
Austin do at least have something to lean on at Q2 Stadium. Their home record reads much better than their overall standing, and that’s often the difference between a team that can steady itself and one that gets dragged into trouble. Sporting KC, by contrast, have been a mess on the road. Three points from six away matches tells you plenty. Not good enough.
Austin FC Form & Analysis
Austin’s recent run has had a bit of everything, though the ugly stuff has stuck in the mind more than the good. They were hammered 5-0 away at San Diego FC last time out, and the scoreline was no fluke. They were cut open too easily, offered very little in the final third, and finished with just 0.50 xG. Before that, they drew 2-2 at Minnesota United after going to Houston and St. Louis City and looking far more organised, winning both of those home games 2-0. That feels like the real Austin at their best: compact, awkward to face, and decent enough when they get a foothold.
The away defeat at San Jose Earthquakes earlier in the month was another reminder that Austin can still unravel when the game runs away from them. They lost 5-1 there after a 3-3 draw at Toronto FC, a match that at least showed some fight and attacking intent. So the picture is mixed. There’s a team in there that can score and compete. There’s also one that can be ripped apart if the structure goes. That won't be lost on Estévez.
At home, though, the numbers are more reassuring. Austin’s league record at Q2 Stadium stands at three wins, two draws and only one defeat, with eight scored and four conceded. That’s a proper base. They’ve only lost once in front of their own fans all season, and the defensive record is the standout: four conceded in six home league matches is tidy work. It’s also the sort of platform that makes them hard to fancy against in Austin. They’re not dazzling, but they’re hard to beat there.
The more useful detail for this one is that Austin have been starting games well at home and getting results without needing to run riot. They’ve won the last two home league matches 2-0, and that control matters against a Sporting side that gives opponents chances. Austin don’t need to be spectacular. They just need to be solid enough to let the game come to them. Against this sort of opposition, that should be enough.
Sporting Kansas City Form & Analysis
Sporting Kansas City’s recent results tell the story of a side that’s still all over the place. They beat LA Galaxy 3-1 at home on 14 May, and that was a proper lift after a brutal run. Before that, they were thrashed 6-0 away at Portland Timbers, and the week before that they only managed a 1-1 draw with Seattle Sounders at home. Go back a little further and it gets even worse: a 5-0 defeat at Chicago Fire, a 3-0 loss away at Vancouver Whitecaps, and a 3-0 loss at Colorado Springs Switchbacks in the US Open Cup. That’s a pile of heavy defeats. Too many, in fact.
The LA Galaxy win was encouraging because Sporting actually looked like a side with a plan. They created 2.14 xG, limited Galaxy to 1.02, and won the big-chance battle 5-0. That’s the sort of performance Wicky will cling to. But one decent home outing doesn’t erase the away horror show. Six conceded at Portland. Five at Chicago. Three at Vancouver. It’s grim reading, and it’s made worse by the fact they’ve only won once on the road in the league all season.
Away from home, Sporting’s league record is one win, no draws and five losses, with just three goals scored and 21 conceded. That is severe. You don’t need to dress it up. Three goals in six away league games is nowhere near enough, and conceding 21 means opponents are getting chances far too easily. They’ve also failed to keep a clean sheet in a long stretch, with a 13-game run without one in all competitions. That sort of fragility changes matches before they’ve really begun.
Still, Sporting do have a way of landing a punch when the game opens up. The 3-1 win over LA Galaxy showed they can be dangerous when they win the physical battles and get Calvin Harris, Dejan Joveljić and Capita into the game. The problem is repeatability. Can they do it away from home? Right now, you’d have to say no. Their season on the road has been too weak, too chaotic and too easy to punish.
Head-to-Head
These two have given us some lively meetings in recent seasons. Austin beat Sporting Kansas City 1-0 at home in February 2025 and also won a wild 3-2 game in Austin in May 2024, while the visitors took a 2-0 win in Kansas City in June 2024. Go a bit further back and there’s a real pattern of tight, open games, including Austin’s 2-1 home win in July 2023 and Sporting’s 4-1 success in Kansas City a month earlier.
The most recent meeting was a preseason game in February, when Sporting won 2-0 in Austin. That won’t carry the same weight as a league match, but it does show they’re not completely overawed here. Even so, Austin’s stronger home record and Sporting’s away problems point in a very clear direction. These games often produce chances. The question is who takes them. On current form, Austin are far likelier to be the side in control.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Austin FC to win at 2/5 here, and that price still looks fair. Sporting Kansas City’s away record is the big red flag: one win, five defeats and 21 goals conceded. That’s not a side you want to trust on the road, especially against a team like Austin that’s been far sturdier at home and has already beaten both St. Louis City and Houston Dynamo at Q2 Stadium this season.
Austin’s own form isn’t spotless, and that 5-0 loss at San Diego was nasty, but this is a much better matchup for them. Sporting have been loose at the back for weeks, and Austin have been picking up results at home without needing to force the issue. A 2-1 home win feels about right, with Austin likely doing enough to edge a game that should still have chances at both ends.
If you want a slightly more adventurous angle, Austin to score over 1.5 goals has a lot going for it. Sporting’s away defence has been wide open for most of the campaign.