Miami

How to watch Cavalier vs. Inter Miami: Lionel Messi’s side seeks Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinals


Lionel Messi makes his first trip to Jamaica, the 48th country covered in his storied career. His Inter Miami club looks to advance past Cavalier FC into the Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinals after winning the opening leg, 2-0.

How to watch Cavalier FC vs. Inter Miami

  • Venue: Jamaica National Stadium, Independence Park — Kingston, Jamaica
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET, Thursday
  • TV: Fox Sports 2
  • Streaming: Fubo (try for free)

This match was relocated from Cavalier’s usual 3,000-seat home ground to the National Stadium, familiar to national team fans as “The Office.” Inter Miami is in a groove, unbeaten in its six total matches of 2025. It thoroughly triumphed in last Thursday’s action even with Messi resting, as Tadeo Allende struck in the 61st minute and Luis Suárez added a goal in the 83rd.

Miami coach Javier Mascherano told media on Wednesday that Messi will travel, although he remained coy on if Messi would start or play.

Allende also scored in Sunday’s MLS tilt with Charlotte, which Miami won 1-0. He has a goal in four consecutive outings, while Suárez has three goals in that four-match span.

Cavalier won the 2024 Concacaf Caribbean Cup and finished first in the Jamaica Premier League. They lost in last year’s tournament to MLS’ Cincinnati FC, 6-0 on aggregate. If Miami holds on Thursday night, they’ll face league peers in LAFC.

The Athletic’s Conor O’Neill on Messi’s first trip to yet another country:

“Across 1,086 club and international matches in 48 countries and 179 cities, Messi has scored 852 goals. Yet this will be the first Caribbean stamp on his footballing passport. For a player who struggled with intense homesickness after leaving Rosario for Barcelona at 13, the Argentinian has since enjoyed a career that’s taken him across six continents. Completing the continental set with a match in Antarctica is logistically challenging — though last month’s trip to Kansas City, played in -9°C (16°F), was a suitable proxy for the ice-capped, largely uninhabited landmass.”

Pablo Maurer, live from Kingston:

“‘He’s going to love Jamaica,’ Campbell, who is in his 60s, says with a laugh. ‘We love him here, he’s gonna love us. Only Pelé was better.’  The shadow of the Brazilian legend looms large in the entire Caribbean, where he was and still is widely idolized. Some 30,000 fans will fill The Office to watch Miami play, but the number won’t approach the 45,000 who showed up in 1975 to watch Pelé’s New York Cosmos face a Jamaican all-star team. Even tiny Cavalier FC has its own story about him, having faced Santos in 1971.”


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(Photo of Lionel Messi: Rich Storry / Getty Images)



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