CF Montréal welcome Philadelphia Union to Stade Saputo on 11 April 2026 in an MLS meeting that already feels loaded for both clubs, even this early in the season. Montréal are trying to steady themselves after a messy start that has left them 13th in the overall standings with just three points from six matches. Philadelphia, somehow, are even lower, bottom of the table on zero points after six straight league defeats.
That’s the backdrop. Two teams already scrapping against the tide, two managers under pressure to find something, anything, that looks like a turn. Marco Donadel’s side have at least shown they can score in bursts, while Bradley Carnell’s Union arrive carrying a heavier weight: they’ve been losing games, conceding goals, and struggling to control either box for long enough to trust them yet. The draw of this one is obvious. You wouldn’t expect caution to rule for long.
There’s also a familiar edge to the fixture. The clubs have played a string of lively, often open meetings in recent seasons, and both camps will know that a single clean first half can vanish quickly here. Montréal’s home record has barely started, so there’s no real safety net at Stade Saputo. Philadelphia, meanwhile, are still chasing their first league point of the campaign on the road. That doesn’t scream defensive conservatism. It screams goals.
CF Montréal Form & Analysis
Montréal’s recent story is one of chaos at the back and enough bite going forward to keep them in matches, at least for spells. Their latest outing, the 4-3 defeat away to FC Cincinnati on 22 March, captured that perfectly. They raced into a lead through Wikelman Carmona, saw Ender Echenique, Prince-Osei Owusu and Ayoub Jabbari all chip in, and still came away with nothing. Seven goals in one game, plenty of incident, and still a loss. Brutal stuff.
Before that, they went down 2-1 at Orlando City and 3-0 at Chicago Fire, which tells you the wider theme. They did have that eye-catching 3-0 win at New York Red Bulls on 8 March, a result that briefly suggested Donadel’s side might have found their feet on the road. It hasn’t really stuck. The earlier 5-0 defeat at San Diego FC and the 3-0 loss to Cincinnati back in October only deepen the sense that Montréal can be pulled apart when the game gets stretched. They’re not short of attacking moments. They are short of control. That’s the problem.
At home, there’s almost no sample to lean on yet — no league matches played at their ground so far — but the broader numbers still frame the picture. Montréal sit on 7 goals scored and 17 conceded overall, and they’ve gone without a clean sheet in three straight. That fits the eye test. Their games are open, often too open, and the defensive line has been far too easy to break. On the plus side, they do carry a threat, and their recent matches have regularly reached the kind of tempo where one good spell from the forwards can change the whole shape of the contest. The issue is whether they can survive the bad spell that usually follows.
There’s a streak here that’s hard to ignore: Montréal have gone over 2.5 goals in all nine of their recent games in this broader run. That’s not a quirk. It’s their identity right now. They play like a side who can score and concede in the same breath. Entertaining, yes. Stable? Not at all.
Philadelphia Union Form & Analysis
Philadelphia’s form is even uglier on paper. They’ve lost their last six in all competitions listed here, and the league results are especially grim: 2-1 at home to Chicago Fire on 21 March, 3-1 away to Atlanta United on 14 March, then home defeats to San Jose Earthquakes and New York City FC, with a couple of awkward nights against Club América in the CONCACAF Champions Cup in between. There was one bright point — the 1-1 draw away at Club América on 19 March — but even that came in a tie they were already struggling to control. The sequence is the story. Philadelphia keep coming back, keep getting punched, and rarely look capable of dictating the terms.
The latest league game summed up their issues cleanly. Against Chicago, they posted just 0.85 xG, gave up 2.21, and were beaten 2-1 at home despite a relatively even shot count. They barely turned pressure into clear chances. The opening half did them no favours either, with Hugo Cuypers and Milan Iloski scoring deep into first-half stoppage time before Jonathan Bamba added a third after the break. That kind of defending isn’t just poor. It’s badly timed. Carnell’s side keep losing the critical moments.
Away from home, the picture isn’t much kinder. Philadelphia’s road record reads three visits, three defeats, and six goals conceded. They’ve managed only two away goals in league play. That’s thin. They haven’t yet shown they can travel and impose themselves, and the pattern is the same whether the venue is home or away: they concede first, then chase, then leave gaps. The league-wide notes are harsh too — no wins in seven, no clean sheets in seven, and they’ve gone behind first in seven straight. You don’t need much more than that to understand the mood around this team.
Still, they’re not completely toothless. The Union have scored in four of their last five and they’ve been involved in some properly messy scorelines. That matters here because Montréal rarely keep things tidy either. Philadelphia don’t need to be good to make this game awkward. They just need to be competitive for long enough to drag it into a shootout. Can they do that? On recent evidence, probably not for 90 minutes.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been kind to neither defence. The most recent meeting in February’s preseason ended with Philadelphia losing 4-2 at home to Montréal, which fits the pattern of recent encounters being open and a bit unruly. In league play, there’s been a decent spread of results: Philadelphia won 2-1 at home in July 2025, Montréal returned the favour with a 2-1 win in May 2025, and the teams also shared a 2-2 draw in Philadelphia in June 2024. Go a little further back and you find a 4-2 Montréal win, a 2-0 Philadelphia win in Leagues Cup, and a 3-0 Union victory in 2023.
The common thread is simple. These meetings usually produce chances, and they don’t often stay quiet. Seven of the last nine have gone over 2.5 goals, which lines up neatly with how both sides are playing right now. Neither team looks built to lock this down. That’s the honest read.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 8/11 for this one. It’s not hard to see why. Montréal have made a habit of chaos, and their last six have produced 10 goals for them and 17 against. Philadelphia are even shakier, with six straight defeats, no league win yet, and an away record that’s already leaking goals. Put those together and you don’t get a cagey tactical battle. You get space, mistakes, and a decent chance of both teams contributing.
The 2-1 correct score has a lot going for it, especially with Montréal’s greater edge in attack and Philadelphia’s habit of conceding first. Still, 2-2 wouldn’t shock anyone. If you want a slightly safer angle, both teams to score has a solid case too, but the totals market is the cleaner read. This has the look of a game where the defences give the attackers every chance to matter.