Charlotte Knights (CHW) @ Nashville Sounds (MIL)
April 5, 2026
S: Will Childers
HR: Luke Adams (NAS)
Attendance: 4,881
Time of Game: 2 hours, 50 minutes
Stadium Facts
Location: Nashville, TN
Opened: 2015
Capacity: 10,000
Level: Triple A
League: International
Time of Game: 2 hours, 50 minutes
Stadium Facts
Location: Nashville, TN
Opened: 2015
Capacity: 10,000
Level: Triple A
League: International
Following Friday night's game in Kentucky, I made the short drive down to Nashville on Saturday morning and spent most of the afternoon exploring the city, this being my first visit to Music City. I thoroughly enjoyed it and am already itching to make a return trip in the future. To me, it seemed like a much nicer version of Las Vegas and New Orleans, with the common theme among those three cities being that pretty much everybody goes there to have a good time. The only negative was that a rainstorm swept through in the late afternoon which wound up postponing the game I had planned on attending that evening. I had already made a contingency plan though and stuck around for the game the following afternoon instead, which happened to be Easter Sunday.
First Horizon Park is located a little bit west of downtown Nashville, and just a few blocks from the State Capitol building. The park is aligned to provide a nice view of the skyline beyond right field from most seating areas. Beyond the park in left field are residential buildings. The exterior of the park on the third base side includes a restaurant with an outdoor patio which appears to provide great views of the action for those who want to eat, drink and watch baseball without actually buying a ticket. This park has as large of an outfield concourse as I can recall seeing in a minor league park. Right field, in particular, has wide open spaces for congregating and having fun. That area includes games such as cornhole, ping-pong and even a miniature golf course. This area is situated below and around the gigantic guitar shaped scoreboard in right-center. I would imagine even someone who doesn't care a lick about baseball could have a good time out there. A second level around the infield contains a good number of suites and club level seating. There are also field level suites right behind home plate that I found to be an interesting design choice because it takes up a pretty large amount of prime real estate with not a lot of actual seats. Perhaps I would have been more understanding of it if I had seen how the space is occupied for a mid-summer game with a larger crowd. The overall large footprint of the stadium and all of these extra amenities gives First Horizon Park as close to a big league feel as I've experienced in the minor leagues. It was not a big league sized crowd for this particular game, however. Which made sense with it being Easter Sunday and the first weekend of April. Following the Saturday night rain, temperatures dropped pretty significantly, making this a somewhat chilly afternoon. Still pleasant though with the sun shining.
To begin the season, the Charlotte roster featured three of the White Sox top pitching prospects. Fortunately, I was able to see one of them in person for the first time for this game: hard-throwing right hander Tanner McDougal. It was easy to see why he is so highly touted as he fired upper 90s heat with nasty breaking balls. That said, he was not overwhelmingly dominant in this outing. He walked four while striking out three in five innings. Nashville did not do much damage against him though, only notching two hits and one run. Meanwhile, the Knights offense did knock around Sounds lefty starter Tate Kuehner a bit, despite having a lineup mostly consisting of left handed hitters. They scored one run in the third and then added three more in the fourth, highlighted by a two run double down the left field line by Drew Romo. Nashville got one back in the bottom of the fourth on a solo home run by Luke Adams, who drilled a McDougal fastball to the berm in left-center, cutting the Knights lead down to 4-1. Charlotte immediately responded with three straight hits off of Kuehner to start the fifth, the last of which was a RBI single by Jacob Gonzalez, ending Kuehner's afternoon. The Knights recorded eight hits off of the Sounds starter, but then only one hit for the remainder of the game facing the bullpen. Charlotte's bullpen, on the other hand, was far less effective. The game completely flipped when the bullpens entered the picture. The Sounds cut the lead to two with a pair of runs in the bottom of the sixth. They scored one on another RBI hit by Adams and another on a sacrifice fly by Brock Wilken. Then the Knights bullpen completely self-combusted in the bottom of the eighth inning, despite Tyler Gilbert retiring the first two hitters he faced in the frame. He then allowed an infield single by Luis Lara and hit Adams with a pitch, ending his day. Adisyn Coffey came in and threw gas on the fire. The first four batters he faced included three walks, another hit batter and a pair of wild pitches thrown in for good measure. The Sounds scored four times in the inning with the only hit being an infield single. The runs scored on a bases loaded hit by pitch, a bases loaded walk and two wild pitches during the same plate appearance, putting Nashville on top 7-5. It was a truly ghastly inning for the Charlotte bullpen, particularly Coffey. The Knights did put a couple runners on base in the top of the ninth on an error and a walk, but Will Childers came in to pitch for the Sounds and struck out the only batter he faced to end the ballgame and earn the save. The Sounds got the 7-5 come from behind victory.
The Saturday rainout cut this trip down to just two games, both of which were lost by White Sox affiliates. Because I wound up skipping Knoxville on this trip, I now have a return trip planned there very soon, during which I will once again try to see the Sox AA squad, Birmingham, play in Knoxville. Here's hoping for good weather.
Next ballpark: City Stadium in Lynchburg, VA














