DC United host Chicago Fire in MLS on Thursday morning, 14 May 2026, with both clubs looking to turn a decent start into something more convincing. It’s not a glamour fixture, but it matters. DC are 14th on 16 points, Chicago sit just above them in 12th on 17, and that small gap makes this a proper mid-table scrap rather than a routine spring game.
For Rene Weiler’s side, the issue is simple enough: they’ve stayed hard to beat, but they haven’t built enough momentum to pull clear. Chicago, under Gregg Berhalter, are in a slightly sharper position in the table, yet their last few results have dragged them back after a bright spell. A win here would change the mood quickly. A defeat would leave both clubs stuck in the same general mess.
The stakes are familiar for teams in this part of the MLS table. Keep pace, don’t drop away, and try to turn home games into points. DC have at least shown they can stay in matches. Chicago have shown they can score, but they’re leaking goals at the wrong moments. That tension is right at the heart of this one.
DC United Form & Analysis
DC United’s recent run has been all about resilience, with a bit of drama mixed in. Their last six have brought no defeats at all, which is a proper base to work from, but the pattern has been messy. They drew 2-2 away to Nashville SC on 10 May in a game that swung back and forth, then followed a 2-0 away win at New York City FC with a 3-2 home victory over Orlando City SC. Before that came the wild 4-4 draw at New York Red Bulls and a goalless away draw at Philadelphia Union. Even the cup tie against One Knoxville SC finished 2-2. Not exactly serene. But not fragile either.
The Nashville match summed them up nicely. They led, got caught, then found another gear late on through Warren Madrigal, only to leave points on the table after Silvan Hefti’s red card shifted the balance. That’s been the story often enough: decent attacking intent, some clean structure in possession, but too many concessions at the wrong time. Still, four unbeaten in the league and six without a loss in all competitions is a solid return. They’re not losing their head.
At home, the numbers are less flattering. DC’s league record at Audi Field reads two wins, no draws and two defeats, with five goals scored and eight conceded. That’s a modest return for a side trying to climb the standings. They can finish chances at home, as the win over Orlando proved, but they’ve also been open enough to give opponents a route back into games. The home profile is clear: they’ll create moments, yet they don’t shut the door. That won’t change just because Chicago are in town.
Chicago Fire Form & Analysis
Chicago Fire’s form is more volatile. They beat Sporting Kansas City 5-0 on 26 April and looked like they might be turning a corner, but the next three have gone badly. A 3-3 draw away to FC Cincinnati came first, and since then they’ve lost 1-2 at home to St. Louis City in the US Open Cup, 2-3 at home to Cincinnati in the league, and 1-3 at home to New York Red Bulls. Three straight defeats. That’s a nasty little sequence, and it has taken the shine off what had been a promising attacking spell.
The New York Red Bulls loss was especially annoying because the Fire actually put up decent attacking numbers without getting the result. They had more shots and forced a handful of big openings, but they still walked away beaten. That’s the problem with this team right now. They can get into dangerous areas and they can score, yet they keep giving something back. Gregg Berhalter will not like the way games keep slipping. Not at all.
On the road, Chicago’s league record is middling rather than poor: one win, two draws and one defeat, with six scored and six conceded. That’s not disastrous, and it tells you they can travel without completely collapsing. The away numbers are balanced, even if the defensive record at home has lately been the bigger issue. Their broader league tally is more attractive than DC’s on paper, with 20 goals scored compared to 15, but the back line has only just stayed in credit with 14 conceded. They’re the sort of side that can produce a lively contest without controlling it. That’s dangerous, because it leaves them exposed to momentum swings.
Chicago’s recent pattern is hard to ignore. They’ve lost three of their last four in the league, and they’ve gone three games without a clean sheet. The Fire are still capable of scoring first and forcing the issue, but they’ve started giving up far too much. If they let DC settle, they’ll be in trouble. If they open the game up too early, even more trouble.
Head-to-Head
These two have been trading blows for years, and the most recent meeting in March 2026 went DC United’s way, a 2-1 away win in Chicago. That result matters because it fitted the current shape of the rivalry: close games, goals, and very little between them for long spells.
The broader pattern is even more striking. Chicago thumped DC 7-1 in June 2025, but DC have won two of the last four meetings and the fixture has regularly produced goals. Five of the last six head-to-heads have gone over 2.5 goals, and both teams have scored in five of the last five. That’s a strong trend, and it fits the way both clubs are playing right now. Neither looks especially settled at the back.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 8/15 for this one. DC United have too much home-edge value here to ignore, even if their own record at Audi Field isn’t spotless. They’re unbeaten in six, they’ve just taken points at Nashville, and they’ve already shown they can get the better of Chicago in this rivalry. That’s enough to keep faith with the hosts avoiding defeat.
The scoreline call is DC United 2-1 Chicago Fire. That feels right for a game where both teams should find chances, but where Chicago’s recent defensive wobble gives DC the cleaner route to a result. If you want a secondary angle, Both Teams to Score looks very live too — the recent head-to-head trend, plus each side’s tendency to leave space, points that way. Still, the safer play is DC not to lose.