50 ohms is the common impedance of antennas and radios.
The closer you get to 50 ohms, (52 is best) the better your match will be. It can take a couple different things to achieve that.
First, an antenna of good design. Typically, mobile antennas are 4 to 5ft in length which actually lowers the feed point impedance below 50 ohms being short of a 1/4 wavelength so a loading coil is used to bring up the impedance to near 50 ohms.
You probably just need to raise or lower the antenna whip(assuming it had one) to get a better match.
See your analyzers manual to learn how to sweep a band or range of frequencies so you can instantly see where the best match is. Then you know which way to adjust the antenna.
I use a Rigexpert analyzer and love it once you learn how to use it's many useful features.
Example pic below of my Rigexpert SWR plot. Target frequency was probably set for 7000 kHz (7 mHz) @ +/- 500 kHz bandwidth. The cursor at the bottom of screen can be moved to the lowest spot on the SWR curve revealing a frequency of 6.598 kHz where the cursor is. This is the lowest spot just below 1.2 SWR so to tune to 7000 kHz, the antenna needs to be shortened or lowered.
View attachment 40394 h
The lower the match is away from the target frequency, the shorter the antenna whip or the higher away from the target frequency, raise the antenna whip.
The target frequency is where you operate most. Make this the best match and let the antennas bandwidth cover the rest of the frequencies within it's range.
Ignore that CB shop way of tuning antennas that say match channels 40 and 1. What this does is gives you a balanced compromise tuning across the CB band.
Also to tune 2 antennas properly, you need to dummy load 1 side then tune the other then switch sides. Without a dummy load, your just guessing.
1 antenna works just fine and is far easier to setup. The co-phase gives you a more front to back pattern if mounted on mirrors or 2 sides of a vehicle whereas a single antenna centered on a vehicle (if possible )is omni-directional.
I say omni-directional is better for a mobile.