Inter Miami will host New England Revolution on Saturday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m. ET at Nu Stadium, with the visitors meeting a club that has turned Wednesday night into another step forward in a strong start to the season.
Miami is 5W-1L-3D with 18 points and sits second in the Eastern Conference. New England arrives at 5W-3L-0D with 15 points, setting up a matchup between two teams near the top of the table and separated by just three points.
The weight of Miami’s recent stretch came on Wednesday night at America First Field in Sandy, Utah, where it beat Real Salt Lake 0-2 on the road. Rodrigo De Paul and Luis Suárez scored, and the result extended Inter Miami’s unbeaten regular-season run to eight matches. It also pushed the club’s road record to 5 wins, 1 draw and 1 loss for 16 points, the best away mark in MLS this season.
There was another milestone in Utah. Noah Allen reached 119 appearances across all competitions and moved past Drake Callender to become the player with the most appearances in Inter Miami history. For a team still early in its life, that kind of record carries some meaning, and it adds another layer to a week that already included three points on the road.
The numbers around Miami continue to tell the same story. Lionel Messi has seven goals this season and is tied for third among MLS scorers, while Telasco Segovia leads the club with five assists in league play. Those figures have helped Miami stay in stride even as the schedule turns quickly back to league business at home.
New England’s visit also brings a familiar opponent. Saturday’s match will be the 11th meeting all-time between the sides, and Miami leads the series with seven wins and three losses. It has won the past four meetings against the Revolution, a run that gives the home side a clear edge before kickoff.
The tension is less about whether Miami has been good enough and more about whether it can keep that level steady while the calendar tightens. This is only its third home game at Nu Stadium, and the chance to turn a good road result into another clean night in front of home supporters is what makes Saturday matter.
For Miami, the task is simple to describe and hard to do: keep the pace, keep the points coming and make sure a strong start does not become the kind of start that asks more questions than it answers.






