St. Louis City welcome Los Angeles FC to the dome on 14 May 2026, with MLS points already carrying a very different weight for the two clubs. St. Louis are trying to haul themselves out of the bottom end of the table and stop this season from slipping away before it properly starts. LAFC, by contrast, are sitting inside the play-off places and still have eyes on a top-four push, even if the race is tight and every flat performance gets punished.
There’s a real edge to this one. St. Louis have been far too open across the first chunk of the campaign, while LAFC arrive with a strong enough away record to believe they can leave with something. Yet the visitors are also coming in off a nasty home defeat to Houston Dynamo, and that changes the tone a little. Their confidence isn’t exactly sky-high. St. Louis, meanwhile, finally got a win at Colorado Rapids last time out and will feel they’ve got a live chance here.
For Yoann Damet’s side, this is about building a platform. For Marc Dos Santos’ team, it’s about avoiding another messy slip and keeping pressure on the clubs above them. You’d expect both benches to see this as the kind of match that can shape a run. It won’t decide the season. It can still alter the mood fast.
St.Louis City Form & Analysis
St. Louis have had a season full of jolts rather than rhythm. They opened this recent stretch with a morale-boosting 4-0 home win over FC Tulsa in the US Open Cup, then followed it by losing 4-1 at Seattle Sounders in MLS. A home defeat to San Jose Earthquakes, 3-2, was another reminder that they’re rarely out of danger and rarely fully in control. Then came the 2-0 loss at Austin FC, which looked like another flat away display, before they finally snapped back with that 1-0 win at Colorado Rapids on 10 May.
That latest result matters because it wasn’t pretty, but it was proper. Jeong Sang-bin’s first-half goal settled it, and St. Louis had to show some grit after Rob Holding’s red card in the second half and Christopher Durkin’s later dismissal. They hung on. That’s something. Mind you, they’ve still only taken two wins from their last six across all competitions, and the overall league picture is grim: 28th in the table, nine points from 11 matches, with a 2-3-6 record and a 10-18 goal difference. There’s no hiding from that.
At home, the numbers are a touch less bleak but still hardly inspiring. One win, one draw and two defeats at their ground, with six scored and six conceded. That even goal return is almost deceptive, because St. Louis have often looked far more fragile than that suggests. They do create moments — the 2-3 loss to San Jose and the 4-0 cup win over Tulsa showed they can play through teams — but the problem is the other side of the ball. They’ve conceded first far too often, and if they go behind against LAFC, the task gets awkward in a hurry. Three of their last six have ended in defeat. That’s not the sort of form that breeds trust.
Still, there are flashes. The xG in the Colorado win was 1.87, comfortably above the 1.21 they allowed, so that was a decent all-round performance rather than a smash-and-grab. The bigger issue is consistency. One decent outing doesn’t erase a month of chaos. Not by a long shot.
Los Angeles FC Form & Analysis
LAFC’s recent run has been strange, even by their standards. They looked in decent nick when they beat Minnesota United 1-0 away and drew 0-0 at home to Colorado Rapids, then found a way through CD Toluca 2-1 in the Champions Cup. That should’ve set them up nicely. Instead, the wheels came off at San Diego FC in a 2-2 league draw, and the return leg in Mexico turned into a heavy 4-0 defeat to Toluca. Then came another blow: a 4-1 home loss to Houston Dynamo on 11 May, a result that felt far bigger than the scoreline alone.
That Houston game was nasty for LAFC because it looked like they had enough of the ball and enough chances to keep it respectable, but the finishing and defending both fell apart. They actually posted 19 shots, six on target and two big chances, yet still got buried. Earlier in the season, the spine of the side looked far more reliable. A 2-1 win over Toluca at home, the 1-0 success at Minnesota and the draw with Colorado suggested a team that could control matches without having to go wild. The last couple of weeks have changed that mood. They’re three games without a win now, and they’ve just shipped four at home. That hurts.
Away from home, though, LAFC remain more trustworthy than St. Louis, and that matters here. They’ve taken eight points from five away league games, with two wins, two draws and just one defeat. They’ve only conceded four on the road in MLS, which is a decent base, even if they’ve only scored six themselves. It’s a controlled away profile rather than a free-scoring one. That usually travels well. Still, there’s a warning sign: they’ve failed to keep a clean sheet in their last four, and if that keeps going, even a steady away side can start dropping points. Can they tidy it up here? That’s the real question.
The broader league position is strong enough to keep belief alive. Sixth place, 21 points, 6-3-3, with 20 scored and 12 conceded. That’s the profile of a side with a ceiling. But they can’t afford another soft start. Not after Houston. Not with St. Louis likely to come out with more bite than their table position suggests.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been leaning LAFC’s way for a while. They beat St. Louis 2-0 on 15 March 2026, then followed that with a 3-0 win in St. Louis back in September 2025. There was a 2-2 draw in Los Angeles in April 2025, but the longer pattern is simple enough: LAFC have usually had the better of it, and St. Louis have struggled to find a breakthrough.
That history matters because St. Louis have gone five straight meetings without a win. They’ve also failed to keep a clean sheet in five of those head-to-head games. That’s a problem when you’re trying to make a case for the home side staying competitive. LAFC have the sharper edge in this matchup. They usually land the first punch.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
We’re backing Double Chance 1X at 8/15 here. St. Louis at home aren’t polished, but they’re awkward enough to keep this close, and LAFC have just come off a bruising 4-1 defeat to Houston. That combination points away from a straightforward visitors’ win. The model’s 78% win-or-draw angle for St. Louis is hard to ignore, especially with LAFC’s recent defensive wobble and the fact they’ve failed to keep a clean sheet in four straight.
The scoreline call is 2-1 to St. Louis City, though that comes with a bit of tension. LAFC are the better side on paper, and their away record is solid, but St. Louis’ home output has been good enough to nick a result if they can keep the game messy. A more cautious angle would be St. Louis or draw and under 4.5 goals, because this doesn’t have to become a shootout. In fact, it probably won’t.