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Minnesota United return to MLS action on 14 May 2026 looking to tighten their grip on a top-eight place when they host a Colorado Rapids side stuck down in 21st. It’s a meeting that matters for very different reasons. Minnesota are hanging around the playoff line and can’t afford to waste home points, while Colorado badly need a lift after a miserable spell that’s left them chasing the pack rather than closing on it.
There’s a clear contrast in mood, too. Cameron Knowles’ side have shown enough bite in recent weeks to suggest they can keep pushing upward, even if they’re not exactly cruising. Colorado, under Matt Wells, arrive with the pressure of a six-match winless run hanging over them. They’ve scored plenty more than their league position suggests, which tells you they’re not toothless, but the defensive side of the picture has been messy. That’s why this one feels finely balanced on paper and a little more tilted in Minnesota’s favour in reality.
The head-to-head record adds some spice. These two have had some lively meetings in recent seasons, and goals have usually followed. That matters here, because both teams have shown enough attacking intent, but not enough control, to keep BTTS firmly in the conversation.
Minnesota’s recent story has been a bit of a seesaw, but there’s enough good in it to give their supporters confidence. They went to FC Dallas on 23 April and won 1-0, then beat Portland Timbers 2-0 at home four days later. The cup trip to San Jose Earthquakes ended badly in a 4-2 defeat, and the 0-1 home loss to Los Angeles FC on 25 April was a reminder that top opponents can still squeeze them. Still, they responded well. A 3-2 away win at Columbus Crew on 3 May was a proper statement, and then came the 2-2 draw with Austin FC at home on 11 May. That last one was a bit frustrating, because Minnesota created plenty and should’ve done better with their chances, but it also extended their current unbeaten run to two matches.
The numbers at home are solid, if not spectacular. Minnesota’s league record at their own ground stands at two wins, two draws and one defeat, with five goals scored and three conceded. That’s not the profile of a side running riot, but it is a base to work from. They’re fairly hard to beat in front of their own fans, and the defensive return is decent. Mind you, the attack hasn’t exactly been relentless at home, so they often need the game to open up a little before they really get going.
What stands out most is their ability to turn matches into chances at both ends. Against Austin, they posted 2.20 xG and allowed only 0.53, yet still conceded twice. That’s the slightly odd part of Minnesota right now: they can look sharp, direct and dangerous, but they don’t always control the scoreboard the way the underlying numbers say they should. James Rodríguez was central in the last game, setting up two goals, and there’s enough creativity there to trouble Colorado. The flip side? They’ve also got a habit of letting the other side in first. That could matter here.
Colorado’s recent form has been grim. They lost 2-3 at home to Inter Miami CF on 18 April, then drew 0-0 away to Los Angeles FC, which at least hinted they could tighten things up on the road. But that didn’t last. A 3-1 defeat at Vancouver Whitecaps followed, then a 1-1 cup draw with Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC, before back-to-back MLS losses away to Houston Dynamo and at home to St. Louis City. The St. Louis defeat on 10 May was especially frustrating. Colorado had 1.21 xG to St. Louis’ 1.87, and still came up short. That tells you plenty. They’re not out of the game early, but they’re not finishing well enough and they’re giving opponents too much space when matches open up.
Their league position reflects that slump. Twenty-first with 13 points from 12 matches is poor return, even allowing for the fact they’ve scored 22 goals, which is more than you’d expect from a side that low in the table. The problem is obvious enough: 20 goals conceded. That’s too many, and it keeps undoing whatever attacking work they manage to do. They can threaten, sure. They’ve got the capacity to score away from home and they’ve done it often enough to keep opponents honest. But when the game turns scrappy or physical, Colorado tend to lose control.
Away from home, the record is hardly inspiring: one win, one draw and five defeats, with eight scored and 13 conceded. That’s the sort of split that makes life difficult in MLS, where road trips are hard enough without giving away cheap goals. Can they keep it tight for 90 minutes? At the moment, there’s little evidence of that. Their away games have usually turned into a chase, and chases rarely end well when the confidence is this fragile. Even the draw at LAFC can’t mask the broader picture. They’re leaking chances, they’re seeing games slip away, and they’ve now gone six matches without a win.
That winless run is the big red flag here. It’s one thing to be competitive; it’s another to keep leaving empty-handed. Colorado have done far too much of the latter.
These two have delivered a pretty lively recent rivalry. Colorado won 2-1 in Minnesota on 10 August 2025, but the teams drew 1-1 in Colorado in late September, and before that Minnesota had the upper hand with a 3-0 home win in September 2024 and a 2-1 away victory in March 2023. There was also a 3-3 thriller in Colorado in May 2024. Not exactly dull, is it?
The wider pattern is even clearer. Both teams have usually found a way through in this fixture, and the games often lean towards goals rather than caution. That doesn’t guarantee anything on Thursday morning, but it does fit the way both sides are behaving right now. Minnesota are creating enough to score, Colorado are always live for a goal, and neither defence has looked entirely trustworthy.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/13 for this one. Our treble tips page is a useful companion here because it pulls together treble tips if you want a middle ground between singles and full accumulators. It’s the cleanest angle on the game and the odds reflect that. Minnesota have been involved in open matches recently, and even when they’ve controlled territory, they haven’t always controlled the clean sheet. Colorado, for all their problems, have still scored regularly enough to keep this market alive, especially away from home where they’ve netted eight times in seven league trips.
The 2-1 Minnesota United call feels right. Minnesota’s home edge should count, and their chance creation has been stronger than their scorelines suggest. Colorado can nick one, though, especially if the game becomes stretched in the second half. That said, if you want a more aggressive route, Over 2.5 Goals also has appeal given the recent head-to-head trend and both teams’ habit of getting pulled into end-to-end games.
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