Charlotte FC host New York City FC in MLS on Thursday morning, 14 May 2026, with both clubs trying to push themselves clear of the pack in a tight early-season race. They arrive level on 15 points, sitting 17th and 16th respectively, and neither side can really afford another flat night. For Charlotte, this is about turning a decent home base into a proper launchpad. For NYCFC, it’s about proving they can travel with any sort of authority at all.
There’s also a bit of recent history hanging over this one. These sides met only a few weeks ago, when Charlotte went to New York and won 2-1 on 19 April. That result gave Dean Smith’s team a lift, but it hasn’t led to a clean run of momentum. Pascal Jansen’s side responded in the most emphatic way possible last weekend, beating Columbus Crew 3-0 at home. So both teams come in with something to cling to. Neither has looked fully convincing. That’s the truth of it.
Charlotte FC Form & Analysis
Charlotte’s recent run has been messy, and the scorelines tell the story if you read them properly. They began with a breathless 2-2 home draw against FC Cincinnati on 10 May, a game they could easily have lost on another day. Before that came a tight 1-0 defeat away to New England Revolution, then the 2-0 US Open Cup loss at home to Atlanta United, which cut a little deeper because it happened in their own stadium. Go back a touch further and you find the odd bright spot: the 4-2 defeat at Nashville SC in the league, which was chaotic rather than convincing, and the excellent 2-1 away win at New York City FC on 19 April. They also battered Charlotte Independence 6-0 in the cup. The whole picture is a bit uneven. One step forward, one back.
At home, though, Charlotte have at least given themselves something to work with. Their league record at Bank of America Stadium reads three wins, two draws and one defeat, with 14 scored and seven conceded. That’s a proper home base, especially compared with their overall position. They’re far more comfortable when they can play on the front foot, and the Cincinnati draw backed that up. Charlotte created 1.86 xG in that game, had 12 shots and matched their visitors for big chances. Not bad at all. The problem is that they still didn’t get over the line. They’ve now gone four matches without a win, and they’ve gone six straight without a clean sheet. That’s the bit that matters here. You can’t keep handing opponents a route back into games and expect to drift upward.
There’s a bit of bite in Charlotte’s attacking numbers, though, and that keeps them dangerous. They’ve scored 20 league goals already and their home output has been strong enough to suggest they’ll create chances again here. Dean Smith will know that the balance is off a little — they’re scoring, but not controlling games for long enough. Still, this is the kind of fixture where home comfort can matter more than league position. Charlotte don’t need to be perfect. They just need to be sharper than they were against Cincinnati and a little tighter when they lose the ball. Simple enough to say. Harder to do.
New York City FC Form & Analysis
NYCFC arrive off the back of their best performance for a while, a 3-0 home win over Columbus Crew on 10 May that finally gave their recent form a bit of shape. Hannes Wolf took centre stage with a hat-trick, and the win came after a frustrating 2-0 home defeat to DC United and a lively 4-4 draw with FC Cincinnati. Before that, they edged New York Red Bulls 3-1 in the US Open Cup and lost 1-0 away to CF Montréal. Then there was the 2-1 home defeat to Charlotte. So the pattern is obvious enough. At times they’ve looked dangerous in possession and quite capable of running up a score. At other times, they’ve been far too easy to play against. There’s no real middle ground yet.
Away from home, NYCFC have been blunt. Their league record on the road stands at one win, one draw and two defeats, with just three goals scored and five conceded. That’s not enough. Plain and simple. The away numbers are light, and that’s been part of the problem for a side that has otherwise shown they can hurt teams at home. When they’re not in control, they look a bit vulnerable between the lines and their attacking play loses its edge. Even the Cincinnati draw, chaotic as it was, happened at home. On the road they’ve been far more contained, and not in a good way.
The encouraging part for Pascal Jansen is that the front line does have punch when given service. NYCFC have scored 22 league goals overall, which is more than Charlotte, and the Columbus win showed they can convert chances into a clean, ruthless result. Mind you, that was at home, where they’re clearly more confident. The away version of this side is a different animal. They’re still capable of nicking a goal, but sustaining pressure for long spells has been a real issue. If Charlotte get on top early, NYCFC will need to answer fast or the match may drift away from them.
Head-to-Head
These teams have developed a lively little recent rivalry, and the meetings have usually delivered something worth watching. Charlotte’s 2-1 win in New York on 19 April was the latest chapter, but that came after NYCFC had hit back hard in November with a 3-1 win in Charlotte. Before that, there was the wildest one of the lot: Charlotte’s 7-6 win in New York on 1 November 2025, a game that sounds made up until you see it in black and white. That alone tells you these fixtures can get loose in a hurry.
The pattern isn’t one-sided. Charlotte beat NYCFC 2-0 in July 2025 and also won 1-0 back in February 2024, while New York took the 2024 meeting 2-1. So there’s no neat dominance either way. What there is, though, is a recurring sense that both teams can find the net and that the game can open up once the first goal goes in. You wouldn’t expect a cagey, sterile affair from these two. Not on recent evidence.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Charlotte FC to win at 11/10 here. That price feels fair enough for a side that’s been much stronger at home than on the road, against an NYCFC team with only one away league win and just three away goals to their name. Charlotte’s home record is the key piece. Three wins, two draws and only one loss at their own ground gives them a solid edge, and their 2-1 win in this exact fixture last month will have sharpened their confidence.
The numbers point to a fairly open game, which suits the home side more than the visitors if Charlotte can keep turning pressure into chances. The expected 2-1 scoreline fits that shape neatly. NYCFC can nick one — they usually can — but Charlotte should have enough going forward to edge it, especially if they start with the same sort of energy they showed against Cincinnati. A small alternative angle would be over 2.5 goals, but the home win is the cleaner call.