Charlotte FC return to Bank of America Stadium on Sunday morning with a proper early-season test in front of them, hosting Nashville SC in MLS. It’s third against first, just six games into the campaign, and both sides arrive with genuine momentum. Charlotte have taken 11 points from six matches and look sharp at home. Nashville sit top with 13 points from six and, despite a slightly quieter return on the road, they’ve already shown the sort of control and defensive steel that can carry a team a long way.
There’s a nice bit of texture to this one too. Charlotte are trying to turn strong home form into a serious playoff push under Dean Smith, while Nashville, led by B.J. Callaghan, have started like a side intent on staying at the top rather than chasing it. It’s early, but these are the sort of games that shape the mood of a season. Win this and you send a message. Draw and the race stays tight. Lose and the questions start.
The wider context is pretty simple. Charlotte’s home record is perfect apart from one draw, and Nashville’s league results have been built on a back line that’s conceded only three goals overall. That usually points one way. Yet Charlotte have been scoring freely at home, and Nashville haven’t exactly been relentless away from Tennessee. So there’s a little tension here, and that usually means goals are in play.
Charlotte FC Form & Analysis
Charlotte’s recent run has been full of contrasts, but the overall picture is positive. Their last six have brought three wins, two draws and just one defeat, and that one loss is already old news. The eye-catching result was the 6-1 demolition of New York Red Bulls on 22 March, a game that turned into a rout after Charlotte found rhythm early and never really let go. Before that, they’d played out a flat but solid 0-0 against Inter Miami CF, and that came after a 3-1 home win over Austin FC. Go back a little further and there was a 1-1 draw away at St. Louis City, then the pair of playoff meetings with New York City FC at the end of last year — a 1-3 home loss and a 0-0 away draw. That’s a decent little story. They’ve moved on from the playoff disappointment and look more forceful now.
At home, Charlotte have been excellent. Their league record at Bank of America Stadium reads three wins, one draw and no defeats, with 11 goals scored and only three conceded. That’s a proper home base. They’ve looked aggressive going forward and they’re not hanging around waiting for chances to arrive — they’re creating them. The 6-1 win over New York Red Bulls wasn’t a fluke, either. It came from constant pressure and an ability to turn territory into real damage. Charlotte have also scored in five of their last seven against Nashville, which is exactly the sort of detail that matters when you’re assessing a BTTS angle.
There’s a small warning sign in the defensive numbers, though. Charlotte are not airtight. Even in the Red Bulls win, they conceded once and allowed plenty of shots. Inter Miami held them to a blank a week earlier, and the 1-3 playoff defeat to New York City FC still lingers in the background as proof that they can be stretched when a disciplined opponent gets the upper hand. But at home, they’ve been much better than that suggests. They’ve got pace, confidence and enough attacking variety to make life awkward for anyone. Four unbeaten now. That’s not nothing.
Nashville SC Form & Analysis
Nashville have been even steadier. Their last six matches have brought four wins and two draws, and the draw column is doing a lot of work here because it includes a pair of clean, controlled continental stalemates with Inter Miami CF and Club América. The most recent of those was the 0-0 draw with Club América on 8 April, a match where Nashville didn’t force the issue but stayed organised and hard to break down. Before that, they beat Orlando City SC 5-0 in MLS, which was a brutal statement at home. A few days earlier they went to Columbus Crew and left with a 1-0 win, then drew 1-1 away to Inter Miami in the Champions Cup. Sandwiched around that were another 0-0 with Inter Miami and a 3-1 league win over Minnesota United. That’s a strong body of work. Quietly, very strong.
Their away league record isn’t quite as flashy as their overall position suggests, and that’s where the debate starts. Nashville are sixth on the road with four points from three away matches, and they’ve scored only once away from home in the league. One goal. That’s thin. Still, they’ve only conceded once too, which tells you how careful they are when they travel. This isn’t a side that tears the game open on the road. They manage it. They narrow it down. They make opponents work for every touch in the final third. That can be effective, but it also means their away matches can drift into tight, low-margin territory.
The unbeaten run deserves a mention because it’s long now — nine matches without defeat, stretching back to the 0-4 loss to Inter Miami in the playoffs last November. That sort of sequence tends to breed confidence, especially for a team that already sits top of the table. But the flip side? The attack away from home hasn’t really caught fire. If Nashville get their usual compact shape right, they’re dangerous. If they don’t find a way to turn possession into genuine chances, they can be dragged into the kind of game Charlotte are happy to play at home — open, quick, and a bit chaotic. That’s not their preferred script.
Head-to-Head
These two have been trading punches for a while, and the recent meetings lean toward goals more often than not. Charlotte won this exact fixture 2-1 in April 2025, while Nashville edged a 2-1 win at home a month later in May. There was also a 1-0 Charlotte victory in May 2024 and a 2-1 Nashville win in March 2024. Go back further and you’ll find a 1-1 draw in 2023, plus Charlotte’s big 4-1 win in 2022. It’s rarely dull. That’s the short version.
One angle stands out from the head-to-head record: both teams have scored in six of the last eight meetings. That fits the mood here pretty neatly. Charlotte usually get chances at home, and Nashville have the quality to nick something even when they’re not at full tilt. Neither side has shown a strong habit of completely shutting the other out.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/13 here, and it feels like the right call for a match that should have enough edge in both directions. Charlotte’s home numbers are too lively to ignore, and Nashville’s recent run has been built on control rather than clean-sheet dogmatism. They’ll fancy their defensive structure, sure. But Charlotte have already scored 11 times in four home league games, and Nashville have found a way to score in most of their recent away and neutral games across all competitions. One side usually finds a way through. Often both do.
A 1-1 draw looks the most believable scoreline. Charlotte have the home momentum, Nashville have the table position and the defensive record, and neither side looks likely to get away from the other for long. If you wanted a slightly bolder angle, Charlotte over 1.5 team goals has some appeal given what they’ve done at home. But BTTS is the cleaner play. It fits the recent meetings. It fits the form. And it fits the numbers without forcing the issue.