Tag: as roma

  • Three Games to Follow on Matchday 2

    Three Games to Follow on Matchday 2

    The games come thick and fast at the start of the season, the last matchday was complete on Monday at 11pm and today at 5:30pm Matchday 2 gets underway. An international break follows this weekend so all the teams will be looking to go into the gap with points on the board. All twenty teams play before Monday and while there’s a lot going on, we’ve picked out three matches to keep an eye on…

    Cremonese v Sassuolo – Friday 17:30 BST

    After Bonazzoli’s spectacular winner at the San Siro last week, Cremonese are rightly buzzing right now. I don’t think anyone tipped them to stay up, despite the presence of survival expert and Italian Big Sam, Davide Nicola. However, they potentially can be sitting on 6 points from 6 by the time you tuck into your pasta tonight. Considering that from 2022 onwards, 31-36 points keeps you up, they’d have taken a big stride towards safety going into the international break.

    Sassuolo on the other hand were the pick of the pundits (including myself) to stay up from the promoted sides. They were poor against Napoli, barely laying a glove on the Champions. Now, granted, Napoli were good – but they weren’t spectacular, barely getting out of second gear. Sassuolo will feel disappointed they couldn’t do more with home advantage in that game and suddenly the pressure is on this match. They don’t want to hit that break on zero points and an away match against a fellow promoted team might seem ideal on the face of it, but Cremonese will be pumped here.

    You never can tell with Serie A, this one could end up a tense, nervy 0-0 – or it could be an all out punching match and finish 2-2. Either way, I’m predicting a fascinating, if not overwhelmingly brilliant affair.

    Fancy a bet? I like both teams to score here at 4/5, I think there’s good value in that given Sassuolo have a strong attack but holes at the back.

    Parma v Atalanta – Saturday 17:30 BST

    This may seem like an odd choice on the face of it, but I’m still fascinated to see how these two new manager get on as the season goes on. Carlos Cuesta joined Parma this summer after spending some time as Mikel Arteta’s assistant at Arsenal. However, he didn’t demonstrate that controlled attacking game in Parma’s first outing. Ok, they were away at Juve but they were so negative it prompted Juve boss Igor Tudor to say, “Parma were quite old-fashioned in their tactics, almost Catenaccio defending”.

    You’d expect them to be more open at home, especially against a side not considered as strong as Juventus. It’s going to be fascinating to see how they cope having lost Giovanni Leoni to Liverpool, Ange-Yoan Bonny to Inter, Dennis Man to PSV and Simon Sohm to Fiorentina.

    Atalanta on the other hand, were dominant in their game against Pisa last week, attacking almost from the first whistle to the last, but ultimately failed to win thanks to an avoidable own goal and a combination of the woodwork and Pisa’s goalkeeper. They themselves lost big attacking talent this summer with last season’s Capocannoniere Mateo Retegui heading to Saudi Arabia and Ademola Lookman still on strike somewhere after trying to force a move to Inter.

    They’ll be pleased, then, that Gianluca Scamacca (once of West Ham) is back fit and scoring. He took his goal well Sunday and was unlucky not to add more, Atalanta certainly suffered when he was withdrawn. Their own new man in the dugout Ivan Juric will be judged quickly after his last two jobs at Roma and Southampton were disasters, but he has proved himself previously with Verona and Torino.

    If we see a winner in this game, that coach will be going into the break fairly content with the other already fearing the worst. A draw helps neither team.

    Fancy a bet? I like Atalanta to win at evens, think they should have enough to overcome Parma.

    @thecalcioblog

    Three matches to keep your eye on this weekend in @Lega Serie A! We’ve picked out the matches we’ll be following along with on Matchday 2. All are available on @DAZNFootball #calcio #cremonese #parmacalcio #pisa

    ♬ original sound – The Calcio Blog

    Pisa SC v AS Roma – Saturday 19:45 BST

    Serie A football is back at Pisa after a short 34 year absence. The Garibaldi will be buzzing on Saturday night and if Pisa score it might just bring that tower down. Their fans need to make home matches a problem for any visiting teams if they’re to stand any chance of being in Serie A next season.

    They were lucky to get away from Atalanta on Sunday with a point, although they worked hard and did have moments on the break. They’ll need to be significantly more clinical in future matches, including this one where they’ll come under sustained pressure from Roma.

    Roma were fairly dominant last week in their opening day win over Bologna. Evan Ferguson impressed on his debut that some fans on X were suggesting they’d uncovered a Batistuta like forward. Perhaps a bit early for that, but he was a handful and would feel he should’ve score at least once with the chances he created. Leon Bailey is still injured, but with Dovbyk, Dybala, Soule and Kone all available they should have enough to see off a stubborn Pisa on Saturday night.

    Watch this game for the atmosphere Pisa will create, it might just inspire the team to do something unpredictable, but it’s hard to see past a Roma win.

    Fancy a bet? I fancy Evan Ferguson to get his first in Serie A and at 6/4 anytime scorer he has a bit of value too.

  • Serie A 2025/26: Predictions

    Serie A 2025/26: Predictions

    Tomorrow we’ll be exactly two weeks away from the beginning of the new season and the optimism that comes when no one has actually kicked a ball. By Tuesday morning, half the fans in Serie A will believe their season is already over, the other half will be boasting how this year is their year. But we’re going to peak even sooner than that on the blog and boldly chuck out some predictions two weeks ahead of time with the Mercato in full swing still. Bookmark this later to come back and laugh at!

    Napoli lift their 4th scudetto in 2025

    Champions – The contenders

    Napoli

    Raced into a great Mercato with the signing of Kevin De Bruyne for nothing. A top, top player but doing nothing for Serie A’s image as a retirement home. With McTominay being nominated for a Ballon D’Or this week and some other smart acquisitions they’re rightly considered favourites amongst most bookmakers. Conte, however, will be the key. He already threw a tantrum and threatened to quit once, will he see the season out? They’ll be hoping so in Naples

    Inter Milan

    Last season Inter beat Lazio away 6-0, but they also lost at home in the Derby in the last minute. They also got to a Champions League final, which they lost 5-0. The point here is, who knows what Inter will show up from one week to the next? Their market has been a mixture of smart looking deals and ridiculous pursuits underlined by failure. Petar Susic looks a good signing, while the campaign for Lookman stumbles on. One alternative is Mason Greenwood, good goalscorer, questionable bloke. The fall out between Calhanoglu and Lautaro appears to have been papered over, so let’s see how the season plays out. New, inexperienced coach Chivu will have his work cut out. Second favourites with most bookies, there may be some value at 3/1.

    Juventus

    Juventus are always listed amongst the favourites no matter what. Kenan Yildiz and Francisco Conceicao will be key in any title challenge Juventus want to put up, if they put one up. Randal Kolo Muani wants to resign for them after his successful loan, Juventus want him, yet they can’t get the deal done. It’s been a strange window for Juve fans, Jonathan David came in and no one can tell if that’s a good thing or not. He’d be a great “option player”, but is he a regular starter? Tudor steadied the ship last year when he came in, but that’s easy for a caretaker to do, now he has the job full time, all his credentials will be put to the test.

    Milan

    A disastrous campaign last time out, they’ve offloaded some of the bloated squad and brought in some key players. Another feather in the cap for the retirement league is their signing of Luka Modric. The 104 year old Croatian will find life in Italy tough, but his reading of the game and ball playing ability won’t be affected by age. The acquisitions of Jashari, Ricci and Estupinian generate some excitement, as does keeping hold of keeper Mike Maignan. If they can keep Newcastle away from Malick Thiaw then they’ll consider it a summer well done. If they can shake off the absolute circus act they became last season, then maybe they’re an outsider for a 20th Scudetto and second star.

    The Others…

    Usually you’d highlight Atalanta as a dark horse outsider, but having seen Ivan Juric manage at Roma and Southampton last season and the fact Ademola Lookman is AWOL chasing his Inter move, I don’t see Atalanta troubling the top pack this season.

    Their former boss, however, has gone to AS Roma who have made some smart moves in the window, appear to be keeping Dybala and Dovbyk and will inject youth into their team as Gasperini likes to do. I would keep one eye on them as the season draws on.

    I’d be surprised to see Genoa or Bologna challenge for the title, but good runs put together in the last season, if they can repeat, could see them trouble the Champions League places.

    And don’t forget about La Viola. Pioli is back in Italy and he has a point to prove. It looks like Moise Kean isn’t going anywhere and they’ve added veteran marksman Edin Dzeko to the roster. De Gea stays in goal and it would only take a solid mid-season run to see them pushing to return to Europe’s top table. The title is probably beyond Fiorentina, but Europe isn’t.

    Verdict

    Ok, balls on the line time…

    • Champions – Napoli
    • Champions League – Inter, Milan, Roma
    • Europa/Conference – Bologna, Atalanta, Juventus

    I get it, no big surprises there. Juventus can change things if they secure Kolo Muani or another big striker, and I just fancy Milan to get it together this season. And as for Roma, I just like their business. I like Evan Ferguson and I like the way Gasperini plays football. They’ve got a chance.

    Dark Horses

    There’s a few clubs who could surprise us all and while they’re outside of the traditional “big clubs” in Italy, they could make a play for a European spot. This season, for me, it’s got to be Como 1907.

    Yeah, alright, they’ve got the richest owners in Serie A and have had a busy summer, but they’ve got that small stadium, were in Serie D as recently as 2019. Any European finish would still be a massive achievement for this provincial side.

    Cesc Fabregas flatly refused the move to Inter in the summer and insisted on staying with “the project”. Only good news appears to come out of this club, they’ve got some great young flair players and while some pundits are questioning them abandoning Italian players for South American gems, they’re bound to win more than they lose.

    The only question marks really are whether they can mix it up and be tough when they need to and can they keep the group together. Well question one was answered the other night when they had a full on fist fight after a friendly with Real Betis, and question two was answered seemingly when Nico Paz and Cesc Fabregas chose to stay rather than heading down the road to Inter.

    Don’t be surprised if Como end up playing European football next season.

    Como 1907 are the dark horses in Serie A this season

    The promoted teams

    Always the favourites to go back down, how will the promoted sides fair next season?

    Sassuolo

    Dominant in Serie B last season, winning the league by some margin, it should highlight their readiness for top flight football. Yet they were comfortably relegated from Serie A the season before. They need to avoid becoming an Italian Norwich and stake a claim to stay in the league. Bookmakers make them the strongest promoted candidate to stay up, and the collapse of Armand Lauriente’s transfer to Sunderland is a big factor in this. The winger scored 18 goals and provided 5 assists last season and will be key to any creativity in Serie A.

    Pisa

    Got promoted and lost manager Pippo Inzaghi back to Serie B and rivals Palermo. Not a great start. However, they have replaced him with Alberto Gilardino and having made it back to the top flight for the first time in 34 years, they’ll be keen to hang on and stay there. Matteo Tramoni looks to be sticking around having banged in 13 goals last season for them, which is welcome. Veteran player Juan Cuadrado is also on board and the loan of midfielder Akinsanmiro from Inter boost their numbers nicely. They’ll need to replicate their strong defence from last season where they only conceded 36 goals on their way to second place.

    Pisa collected a trophy for coming second in some Utter Woke Madness

    Cremonese

    Cremonese finished 4th last season, behind Spezia, but went up through the play offs. However, since the departure of Giovanni Stroppa who led them to promotion they have survival specialist Davide Nicola in charge. The Italian Sam Allardyce has rescued Crotone (2019/20), Torino (2020/21), Salernitana (2021/22), Empoli (2023/24). He will hope to replicate this with Cremonese, but will have his work cut out with a side who’ve only just spent more than €10m this Mercato.

    Verdict

    I can’t see past Cremonese for relegation I’m afraid. Sorry guys, but despite having Davide Nicola, it doesn’t look good for you. Sassuolo have the capability to stay up, but do they have the belief only time will tell. Pisa could dig in under Gilardino’s leadership and if they can continue their strong defensive record they definitely have a chance, but I think the rest of the league may prove too good for them.

    However, bookmakers also look to the likes of Verona, Lecce and even Cagliari as potential relegation candidates.

    I think ultimately, Lecce and Cremonese will go, one of Pisa and Sassuolo to join them…Sorry guys.

    Top Scorer

    Might as well just piss into the wind and pick a name here. Who can ever predict the top scorer? Even when Inter won two years ago and Lautaro took the prize it was his first time ever. Last season Mateo Retegui won it and promptly left Italy for Saudi Arabia. So who’s going to take it home this season?

    Well, surprisingly, Lautaro Martinez is leading the bookies charge at 9/2, good value but he spent most of last season looking exhausted. Another 60-odd games last season won’t have helped him out. Moise Kean is next best at 11/2, but you can’t help but feel he needs Fiorentina to have a good season for him to win that title.

    Jonathan David pops up third in a lot of lists, and at 7/1 there’s certainly some value in it. Again, if Juventus spend another 3 months imploding as per last season, his chance will have gone.

    There’s some newbies to the league who have a shot too. I can’t hide my admiration for Evan Ferguson and with a solid pre-season of goals for Roma and Gasperini’s attacking style, he’s got a great chance to get it. Noa Lang at Napoli is a dark horse too. Not exactly a prolific career to date but Napoli will spend most of the season on the front foot and with the supply lines coming from KdB and McFratm, he should get chances. As will their other striker, Big Rom Lukaku. Always up there without ever winning the grand prize, he’ll have his eyes on it this season.

    Lautaro Martinez could win the top scorer award this season

    Verdict: For some value I’d go for an each way bet on Evan Ferguson, but for me it’s got to be Lukaku or Lautaro. Once a prolific duo, now on opposite sides of the title race. Their goalscoring might just tip the title in their team’s favour.

    Liked this post? Check out our Kit Review for 2025/26

  • Legends of Calcio: Francesco Totti

    Legends of Calcio: Francesco Totti

    Any football fan with an algorithm worth anything will have come across the video on Instagram or TikTok before. An emotional Francesco Totti bidding an emotional farewell to an even more emotional Stadio Olimpico. I’m not a Roma fan, but I am a human being so I always stop and watch the video.

    Football fans far and wide – except maybe Laziali – almost all stop and watch the video and get a lump in their throat. Totti spanned club rivalries, a one club man who stayed true to his hometown in the face of enormous offers from elsewhere. He lived out everyone’s childhood dream, captaining their local team, lifting a title for them and becoming their all time great.

    I read somewhere that he said he hasn’t been able to walk around the city he loves so much in 20 years because he’s mobbed everywhere he goes. It seems bittersweet for a man who turned down Real Madrid to stay in Rome.

    But how did he get here? Plenty of players come through their hometown youth system and don’t end up a legend across the entire country – look at Trent Alexander Arnold…

    On March 28th 1993, Vujadin Boskov probably had no idea what he was unleashing on the world when he handed a 16 year old Francesco Totti his debut. Boskov had recognised his talent in training, specifically his technical ability, and called him up to the first team.

    A young Francesco Totti makes his debut against Foggia, aged 16
    Il Bambino makes his debut for Roma, aged 16

    He was so young, the other players called him “il bambino” (the kid) and he kept his school books in his locker at the training ground. Early the next season, on September 4th 1994 a 17 year old Totti opened the scoring against Foggia with a powerful, well placed effort.

    It was the first of many goals, 307 in total during 786 appearances. He also contributed 180 assists and at the time of his retirement was second in the list of all time Serie A appearance holders. The numbers speak for themselves, but numbers is a modern curse that we judge footballers on – thanks Pep. What made Totti a great was the way he effortlessly did incredible things on the pitch, his inventiveness and his ingenuity.

    Thierry Henry described Totti as having “magic in his boots” and Pele said he was “one of the most intelligent players” he’d ever seen. It wasn’t always plain sailing for Totti however, in the mid-2000s he would suffer with recurring ankle and knee problems.

    Not only this, but in the closing months of the 2005-06 season, he would break his leg in a match against Empoli. With the 2006 World Cup coming fast, Totti didn’t play a game from February until the end of the season.

    The career threatening injury, as it turned out, couldn’t even threaten Totti’s World Cup. He would play in all seven games for Italy as they lifted the famous trophy following a shoot out win over France in the Final.

    During the tournament, Totti would provide 4 assists and a crucial goal in the 95th minute of the Round of 16 against Australia, winning the game for Italy from the penalty spot and preventing extra time. After the tournament, manager Marcelo Lippi was moved by Totti’s commitment and ability, commenting, “Only Totti could’ve played like that with half a leg”.

    Francesco Totti of Italy with the World Cup trophy
    Francesco Totti, with half a leg and the World Cup trophy

    His resolve to Roma was tested a few times, mainly by Real Madrid, who offered him a mega money deal in the early 2000s and pretty much guaranteed him a Ballon D’Or. On turning them down (several times), Totti said, “If I had gone to Madrid, I might have won more, but I would have betrayed myself”.

    It was, therefore, fitting that Totti would provide the crucial goal to provide Roma’s first Scudetto since 1983. In the game against Parma on 17th June 2001, Totti scored the decisive goal that sealed a 3-1 victory and would see him parade around the pitch with a gladiator’s cape on. All over the city, the celebrations went on for days, and there’s still graffiti across Rome to this day saying “Grazie Capitano”.

    Francesco Totti celebrating his Scudetto securing goal in 2001
    What the Scudetto means to Francesco Totti

    There were many more iconic moments for Totti throughout his career. Some that come to mind are his ridiculous 40 yard lob against Inter at the San Siro in 2005. Spotting Julio Cesar off his line, he went for it and secured himself goal of the season, prompting commentary cries of “Non ci credo!!!” That’s “I don’t believe it” to you and I.

    He also had a signature penalty move, crowned in Euro 2000 against the Netherlands when he chipped the ball down the middle in the shoot out under enormous pressure. His now iconic “cucchiaio” penalty was preceded by him turning to his team mates and saying, “Now I’ll do the spoon”.

    Totti was the true inventor of the selfie celebration too, after scoring twice in the Rome Derby, he grabbed a phone from coach Guido Nanni and took a selfie with the Curva Sud. His second goal in that game equalled the record for goals scored in the Derby della Capitale with 11 – alongside Dino Da Costa.

    It was this sort of cavalier performance for Rome, after turning down the big money and personal honours that led to team mates like Daniele De Rossi to say of him, “He is football for Rome. He’s the banner, the heart, and the king of this city.” His long term coach Luciano Spalletti said of him, “Totti is Roma, and Roma is Totti. He’s a symbol of a city, not just a club.”

    When the time came to call time on his career, it was no wonder he was going to get the send off we all watch on Instagram and TikTok every time. Totti once said, “Winning one title at Roma to me is worth winning 10 at Juventus or Real Madrid.” It was that kind of refreshing loyalty that endeared him to so many across Rome and Italy.

    An emotional Francesco Totti says goodbye to the Stadio Olimpico
    A tearful Francesco Totti says goodbye

    When he stood on the pitch at the end of the game against Genoa at Stadio Olimpico, Totti – overcome with emotion – bid farewell to Roma with some typically passionate words, “Now I’m afraid. I need you and the love you’ve always shown me.”

    So many footballers say they struggle after retirement and this openness with his public was typical of a man who once said, “I was born a Roman, and I’ll die a Roman”.

    And perhaps that’s the best way to remember one of the true Legends of Calcio…