Columbus Crew welcome Orlando City SC to MLS action on Monday morning, 13 April 2026, with both sides carrying a fair bit of baggage into this one. It’s early enough in the season for nobody to be in panic mode, but that doesn’t mean the stakes are small. Columbus are trying to stop a wobble before it turns into something uglier, while Orlando need a response after being blown apart in their last outing. That kind of mood can shape a game fast.
Henrik Rydstrom’s Crew arrive without a win in five league matches, which is a bad little run no matter how you dress it up. Martín Perelman’s Orlando, on the other hand, have been all over the place: one win, then another heavy defeat. Both teams have shown they can score, both have shown they can concede, and that usually points to an open game. You’d expect chances at both ends. The only real question is whether either defence can hold its nerve.
There’s also a useful bit of history between these sides. Recent meetings have generally been lively, with goals, momentum swings and very little comfort for either camp. That matters here because neither team is in the kind of shape that invites trust. Columbus have home advantage, but Orlando have already proven they can live in this fixture and get something out of it. This should be a decent watch. It probably won’t be a clean one.
Columbus Crew Form & Analysis
Columbus have been drifting a bit since their bright playoff win over FC Cincinnati at the start of November. That 4-0 hammering of their rivals felt like a statement at the time. Since then, though, the gears have slipped. They lost 2-1 away to Portland Timbers in February, were held 0-0 by Chicago Fire at home, went down 1-0 to Nashville SC at home, and then lost 2-1 away to Toronto FC on 21 March. That’s four league matches without a win, and five if you fold in the playoff defeat to Cincinnati at the end of last year. Not ideal.
The Toronto game summed them up pretty well. Columbus actually struck first through Wessam Abou Ali inside four minutes, which should have settled them. It didn’t. Toronto worked their way back in, and even though Columbus had enough possession of the contest to get into decent areas, they didn’t control it for long enough. The xG line — 0.84 to 0.92 — tells the story of a game that was tight but not especially convincing for the Crew. A side with their attacking ambitions should be doing more with home or away territory than this.
That’s the tension with Columbus right now. They’ve still got enough forward quality to score, and the opening goal in Toronto showed they can start quickly. But they’ve only scored more than once in one of their last six, and they’ve gone three matches without a clean sheet in the league stretch reviewed here. At home, the picture isn’t flattering either: they’ve already drawn blank against Chicago and lost to Nashville, so the fortress talk can be put away for now. If Rydstrom’s side want to impose themselves here, they need a sharper final third and a lot more care at the back. Right now they’re leaving the door open too often.
Orlando City SC Form & Analysis
Orlando’s recent form is even more erratic, and the last couple of weeks have been a proper mixed bag. They opened March with a chaotic 4-2 home defeat to Inter Miami, then went to New York City FC and were beaten 5-0, which was a real battering. After that came a better night at home against CF Montréal, where they won 2-1 and at least looked like a side with some punch. But the positivity didn’t last. Their latest trip, to Nashville SC on 21 March, ended in another ugly 5-0 loss. That’s two away trips in a row where they’ve been torn open.
The Nashville collapse was brutal. Orlando posted just 0.99 xG, but they conceded 2.84 and allowed 10 big chances, which is the kind of defensive mess that usually ends badly. They were chasing shadows from early on, and once Nashville got on top, the game ran away from them. They managed only one shot on target in the whole match. That’s not a bad day at the office. That’s a collapse. Perelman will know his side can’t turn up at Columbus with that sort of structure and expect to survive.
Still, Orlando aren’t without threat. They scored twice against Inter Miami and beat Montréal 2-1 at home, so they’re capable of finding a way through if the game opens up. The issue is that they’ve been leaking at a frightening rate, especially away from home, and that’s why their matches keep spilling past the 2.5-goal line. Their away record in this form patch is ugly, with those two heavy defeats in New York and Nashville showing a team that’s struggling to compete for long spells on the road. If they concede first here, the pressure will really bite. And that’s when things tend to unravel.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has had plenty of bite in recent seasons. Orlando beat Columbus 3-1 in July 2025, but the Crew had their own answer with a 1-1 draw in Orlando in October. Go back a little further and you find a more back-and-forth pattern: Columbus won 4-3 in September 2024, then took a 2-0 away win in May 2024, and also won 2-0 in Orlando in the 2023 postseason. That’s a decent stretch of competitive, goal-heavy meetings.
The broader pattern is clear enough. Both teams have scored in six of the last eight head-to-heads, and Columbus have been first to score in all eight of those listed meetings. That’s a useful edge, and it fits the tone of this fixture well. When these sides meet, the game tends to open early rather than settle into caution. No surprise there. Neither defence has looked especially secure in this matchup, and both clubs have recent evidence of that.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/9 here, and that feels like the safest angle on the board. Columbus have gone five league matches without a win, Orlando have just been routed 5-0 at Nashville, and neither side has shown much interest in locking games down. When you combine Columbus’ leaky run with Orlando’s habit of turning matches into chaos, three goals looks the likelier outcome than a cagey one.
The projected scoreline of 2-1 to Columbus fits the shape of the game neatly. The Crew have home advantage and a little more control in their attacking phases, while Orlando still carry enough threat to nick one. That said, I wouldn’t be shocked if this ends 2-2. Both teams have been unreliable at the back, and recent meetings between them have regularly featured goals at both ends. Over 3.5 is a touch greedier, but Over 2.5 is the play that keeps the nerves down.