marzo 13, 2026 0 Por Claudio Villalobos
Nashville SC vs Inter Miami CF — Concacaf Champions Cup 2026

Nashville Total Sports

Concachampions  |  Round of 16  |  First Leg


«First and foremost, keep their chances limited. They are a highly talented team that can score, so keep them the best we can off the scoreboard — also be a little more clinical in decision making when we get our chances.»

— BJ Callaghan, Head Coach — Nashville SC

Post-match press conference — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026

Callaghan knew before the final whistle. He said it with the clarity of a man who had just watched ninety minutes of continental football and understood exactly what had worked and what had fallen short. What unfolded at Geodis Park on that rainy March night was the real-time evidence of his own words.


Nashville SC 0–0 Inter Miami CF

A goalless draw that felt like a statement

Geodis Park  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  March 11, 2026  •  24,616 in attendance

Match report by Claudio Villalobos  •  Photography by Danny Villalobos


Rain fell over Geodis Park like a harbinger of a tense, playoff-flavored night. With the stadium dressed in anticipation and the stands wet but alive, Nashville SC welcomed Inter Miami CF for the opening act of a continental knockout tie that had been building all season. The growing rivalry between both clubs, forged through MLS battles, now moved to the Concacaf Champions Cup stage — and the stage delivered.

Twenty-four thousand, six hundred and sixteen fans packed the Geodis, many of them hoping to see their team land a blow of authority against an Inter Miami side powered by Lionel Messi and carrying the aura of a favorite. Nashville SC, however, had other ideas.

«The Geodis roared through the rain. Nashville SC made clear this tie is far from decided.»

⚽  First Half

Nashville SC came out with a clear tactical blueprint: control the midfield, deny space, and exploit transitions. The plan worked. The opening exchanges were measured as both sides tested their distances, but the Boys in Gold began to impose their territorial authority.

Matthew Corcoran challenges Rodrigo De Paul in front of goal at Geodis Park
Matthew Corcoran challenges Rodrigo De Paul (No. 7) in front of goal — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

MIN. 11′  The first real chance of the match went to the home side. In a sharp, high-quality transition, Yazbek and Mukhtar combined with surgical precision to release Sam Surridge in on goal. The English striker struck with intent, but the ball glanced off the left post of goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair. The crowd exhaled.

Sam Surridge on the ball for Nashville SC at Geodis Park
Sam Surridge in action for Nashville SC — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

MIN. 21′  Inter Miami’s first warning came through Cristian Espinoza, who whipped in a hard, driven cross that grazed the head of center back Micael Dos Santos. The ball deflected narrowly over the crossbar — a reminder that the visitors were dangerous from wide areas.

Cristian Espinoza drives at the Inter Miami defense at Geodis Park
Cristian Espinoza drives at the Inter Miami defense — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

The match then settled into a phase of shared possession, but with Nashville firmly in charge of the tempo. The home side’s mid-block system closed down the diagonal passing lanes that Inter Miami rely on to connect with Lionel Messi. The Argentine maestro, closely shadowed by Nashville’s midfield, found no freedom in the spaces he usually exploits. The staggered defensive shape was disciplined and effective — and behind that defensive wall lies a story of deliberate, human construction.

Maxwell Woledzi shields the ball under pressure from an Inter Miami player at Geodis Park
Maxwell Woledzi shields the ball under pressure — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

«Coming to Nashville, I’ve seen a lot of the defenders, and I was just watching whoever I’d be playing with. I just have to make sure I’m able to work well with my partner. And yeah, it tends to be Jeisson. Jeisson speaks Spanish, so I’ve had to learn some Spanish too, which is tough, but I’m working on it. If not the language, at least something so we can work together. So far it’s working well, and I’m happy to play with him.»

— Maxwell Woledzi, center back  •  Mixed zone, Geodis Park

Woledzi and Jeisson Palacios. A Ghanaian and a Colombian building a common language — literally and footballistically — to anchor Nashville SC’s defense on continental nights like this one. The partnership worked. Messi was contained. The clean sheet was no accident.

Lionel Messi drives into the area under pressure from Patrick Yazbek and Maxwell Woledzi at Geodis Park
Lionel Messi drives into the area under pressure from Patrick Yazbek and Maxwell Woledzi (No. 3) — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

MIN. 38′  After a sloppy buildup error in their own half, Nashville launched a quick counter that ended with Warren Madrigal striking hard from distance. St. Clair held comfortably, but Nashville’s intent to punish any lapse was clear.

Warren Madrigal on the ball under pressure from Lionel Messi at Geodis Park
Warren Madrigal (No. 41) on the ball under pressure from Lionel Messi — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

MIN. 43′  The best moment of the first half arrived in the 43rd minute. Sam Surridge collected a lucky deflection off the Inter Miami defense and met it with a ferocious volley. Dayne St. Clair produced a world-class stop, reacting instinctively to deny what looked like a certain goal. It was the save that defined the first period — a half where Nashville were the better side but where the Canadian goalkeeper stood tall.

«Dayne St. Clair, in the Nashville rain, was the best player on the pitch in the first half.»

📊  At the Break

Nashville SC and Inter Miami went into the locker rooms level, but the 45 minutes had been full enough to keep Geodis Park on edge throughout. The clearest chances belonged to the home side, who successfully blocked Inter Miami’s usual creative channels. Messi, the visitors’ primary weapon, was kept quiet for the full opening period.

Jeisson Palacios and Maxwell Woledzi hold their ground in the box against Inter Miami at Geodis Park
Jeisson Palacios (No. 4) and Maxwell Woledzi (No. 3) hold their ground in a crowded box against Inter Miami — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

Inter Miami accumulated approaches without the necessary bite. Nashville’s decision to close the game in the middle three-quarters of the field proved an effective antidote to Florida’s attacking threat.


⚡  Second Half

Nashville SC emerged with the same intensity after the break, but the game began to open up. Inter Miami needed to push, and Nashville would look to exploit the space left behind.

MIN. 57′  The most electric moment of the match arrived in the 57th minute. Lionel Messi finally found a pocket of space on the right flank, drove into the area with his signature movement and fired a right-footed shot that Brian Schwake could only parry. The ball fell to Germán Berterame, who, in an inexplicable miss from point-blank range, directed his effort wide. The Geodis held its breath — and then erupted in relief.

Lionel Messi drives at goal tracked by Hany Mukhtar at Geodis Park
Lionel Messi drives at goal tracked by Hany Mukhtar (No. 10) — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

MIN. 62′  Nashville replied with their best attacking move of the night. A spectacular offensive transition ended with Cristian Espinoza delivering a brilliant assist to Warren Madrigal. The Costa Rican struck first-time with conviction, but his effort went agonizingly wide. Madrigal buried his face in his hands.

Warren Madrigal takes on Lionel Messi at Geodis Park
Warren Madrigal (No. 41) takes on Lionel Messi in the second half — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports
Nashville SC and Inter Miami players contest a goalmouth scramble at Geodis Park
A goalmouth scramble as Nashville SC press for the breakthrough — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

MIN. 65′  Cristian Espinoza whipped in a corner kick that found Reed Baker-Whiting at the near post. The header was well directed toward goal — seemingly destined — but Dayne St. Clair stretched fully to tip the ball over the crossbar in another outstanding intervention.

MIN. 70′  Nashville pressed again with a similar combination. Andy Nájar charged forward down the right and delivered a pinpoint cross into the box. Hany Mukhtar brought it down with quality and unleashed a driven cross-goal effort — but it slipped just wide of the far post.

With 24,616 fans on their feet, Geodis Park was living a match that deserved a goal. Nashville SC pressed, probed, and created. The scoreboard, however, refused to budge.

MIN. 82′  Alex Muyl arrived at the edge of the box and unleashed a powerful strike. The ball deflected off a defender and grazed the crossbar before sailing over. It was the final major chance of a night that had everything — except a goal.


Final Score

Nashville SC  0 – 0  Inter Miami CF

Concachampions — Round of 16, First Leg  •  Geodis Park


📝  Match Analysis

Nashville SC and Inter Miami shared the spoils at Geodis Park, leaving the tie wide open heading into the second leg in Fort Lauderdale. The goalless draw, on paper a neutral result, carries a slight moral edge for the home side: Nashville were the better team, created the clearer chances, managed the match with greater tactical intelligence, and held Messi to one of his quietest nights in recent memory.

Dayne St. Clair was the unexpected hero of the night. Three decisive interventions — the Surridge volley in the first half, the Baker-Whiting header in the 65th, and a series of sharp reactions in the second period — kept the scoreboard clean and denied Nashville the lead they had earned.

«The 0–0 looks fair on paper, but Nashville SC played to win. Fort Lauderdale will have the final say.»

This Concachampions story is written in two chapters. The first ended under the Tennessee rain with honors even. The second will be played in Florida, where Inter Miami will have their crowd and Nashville must prove that what happened tonight was not luck — it was conviction. Two coaches, two readings of the same result.

Javier Mascherano on the touchline with his coaching staff at Geodis Park
Javier Mascherano on the touchline with his coaching staff — Concacaf Champions Cup, Round of 16, First Leg — Geodis Park, March 11, 2026. 📷 Danny Villalobos / Nashville Total Sports

«I think this kind of series will come down to the details. In the end, when two teams are this evenly matched and compete the way both sides did tonight, any small detail can keep you in or knock you out. It will depend a lot on the intensity we bring at home. We would have liked to score a goal to carry some kind of advantage, but it was important not to concede. Our thinking is to try to win the game at home and advance. It’s in our hands, and we’ll do everything we can to go through.»

— Javier Mascherano, Head Coach — Inter Miami CF  •  Post-match press conference, Geodis Park

Mascherano said it plainly: details decide. And in that, without knowing it, he agrees with Callaghan. One speaks of being more clinical with chances. The other speaks of home intensity. Both know the 0–0 settled nothing — it only moved the decision to Fort Lauderdale. Callaghan knows what Nashville needs. Mascherano does too. The question is who executes better when it matters most.


🟡  Nashville SC Starting XI

GK  Brian Schwake — Goalkeeper

RB  Andy Nájar — Right Back

CB  Maxwell Woledzi — Center Back

CB  Jeisson Palacios — Center Back

CM  Yazbek — Midfielder

CM  Hany Mukhtar — Attacking Midfielder

CM  Cristian Madrigal — Midfielder

RW  Cristian Espinoza — Right Winger

FW  Warren Madrigal — Forward

FW  Sam Surridge — Striker


📋  Match Facts

Competition: Concacaf Champions Cup 2026 — Round of 16, First Leg

Venue: Geodis Park, Nashville, Tennessee

Attendance: 24,616

Conditions: Rainy, pitch in good condition

Result: Nashville SC 0 – 0 Inter Miami CF

Second Leg: Fort Lauderdale, Florida (date TBC)

⭐  Standout Performances

Dayne St. Clair (Inter Miami CF) — Man of the match. Three decisive saves that denied Nashville the win they deserved.

Sam Surridge (Nashville SC) — A constant attacking threat. Had the first big chance and was the sharpest of the Nashville forwards.

Hany Mukhtar (Nashville SC) — Creative engine. Combined with precision and was central to the home side’s attacking build-up.

Warren Madrigal (Nashville SC) — Came close to the breakthrough twice. Unfortunate in front of goal but active throughout the night.


Nashville Total Sports  •  nashvilletotalsports.com  •  @NashTotalSports

Match Report: Nashville Total Sports — March 11, 2026

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