We head into Matchday 10 of Serie A this weekend and so far, it’s fair to say the Italian top flight hasn’t disappointed. This week alone we had penalty controversy in a battle between the top two, Juventus sacked their manager at the earliest point since the 60s and small provincial teams keep tearing up the form book. So has there been a star of the season so far?
Christian Chivu was building a strong case until his side lost 3-1 in Naples at the weekend in the aforementioned battle at the top. After a little blip in September, Inter had managed to win 7 on the bounce in all competitions before McTominay, De Bruyne and Anguissa put them back in their box. Their housemates silent but strong start has been sandwiched by two awful results against promoted teams, losing at home to Cremonese on Matchday 1 and then drawing with Pisa on Friday at the San Siro.

Milan had slowly been building some momentum under the radar including a credible draw at Juve, only prevented a great win with Pulisic’s missed penalty. He had been their star of the season until that point, scoring and assisting in a superb home win over champions Napoli. The two Milan clubs aren’t the only Lombardy clubs enjoying their start to the season (overall)… Como and Cremonese are surprising everyone.
Alright, Como might not be a particular surprise, everyone tipped them to improve on last season’s impressive showing by challenging for Europe. Cesc’s team appear to be pushing the envelope though and sit 5th going into Matchday 10, five points off the top of the league and one point ahead of the Old Lady. Yes, more on Juventus later, but Como and their star boy Nico Paz have been wowing audiences across Italy and Hollywood and are right in the hunt for Champions League football.

Two points behind them and having a party is everyone’s favourite to be relegated, Cremonese. The Lombardy side came up in the play off last season and were widely tipped to be enjoying Serie B again next season. The side from the home of violins were playing the World’s smallest ones when they won 2-1 at Milan on their first outing, then promptly beat fellow newboys Sassuolo in Matchday 2. Just when things couldn’t get any better, they signed former Premier League winner Jamie Vardy.
Cremonese have only lost once this season, a 4-1 hiding at the San Siro against Inter, but Jamie Vardy scored his first goal recently and they sit in 8th place above Lazio and Atalanta.
Atalanta, the other Lombardy side in this year’s Serie A, have started slowly. They dominate games as you’ve come to expect of the side from Bergamo but having lost Retegui to Saudi Arabia, had a Lookman who was on strike all summer and with Scamacca perenially injured, they’ve struggled to convert their dominance in matches into goals. In fact Atalanta are the only side still undefeated in the league, but 7 draws and 2 wins tells its own story.
Speaking of steady, a team steadily getting the job done every week is Bologna. Unspectacular, unnoticed and unsurprising – 4 wins and 3 draws have propelled the side from the home of Spag Bol up into 6th and flirting with a return to Europe’s top table. As long as Orsolini stays fit that is. The Bear is joint top scorer in Serie A with Hakan Calhanoglu and has scored more than a third of Bologna’s goals himself.
Not far up the road in Emilia Romagna, Parma have picked up exactly where they left off last season. Superb kits, but unconvincing performances have left them sitting just above the drop zone. For that description, we can bunch in Cagliari and Pisa too. Take away the great kits and we can also class Lecce and Torino in that bracket.
Lazio have been in turmoil. Absolutely skint and banned from signing players by the league as a result things threatened to get away from them this season. Maurizio Sarri returned to the club and very nearly quit within a week, instead choosing to do a press conference moaning about how he wasn’t given the full picture. He steadied the ship, however, and Lazio are delightfully average with 3 wins, 3 draws and 3 defeats.
Lazio put the final nail in Igor Tudor’s coffin. The Croatian who made over 100 first team appearances for Juventus was their interim manager last year and got them into the Champions League at the last moment. He then got the gig permanently. Well, for about 3 months. For the first time since 1969 Juventus sacked a manager before November. After a thrilling Derby D’Italia win over Inter, Juve embarked on an 8 game winless run which the rest of Italy found hilarious. Those in Turin were more stoney faced.

Tudor was sacked, replaced by former national team coach Luciano Spalletti. Spalletti left Napoli as a champion 3 years ago and proclaimed he’d never manage another club side in Italy. He didn’t address this at his unveiling. The Ultras made their feelings perfectly clear after Tudor was given the boot, a banner at the stadium read, “Tudor one of us always, the fish rots from the head”. A cleverly disguised dig at the board in Turin and a sign that there are deeper issues at Juventus.
Joining Tudor in the Job Centre soon could be Genoa’s Patrick Viera and Fiorentina’s Stefano Pioli. Both are winless and according to the fans of each club, massively outstaying their welcome. The San Siro was echoing with cries of “Pioli’s on Fire” on Wednesday night, but not the Milan fans who once sang his name, it was Inter fans mocking their old adversary as they ran riot, winning 3-0.
Roma, by the way, are behind Napoli on just goal difference. Their quietly studious start has been underlined by Gasperini taking over from Ranieri in the summer. Gasperini, a famously defensive coach, master of catenaccio. Wait. No he isn’t. He’s famously gung-ho and defensively irresponsible. In their nine matches so far, Roma have conceded just 4 goals. Five clean sheets in these games underline Roma’s strength despite boasting a forward line that includes Evan Ferguson, Artem Dovbyk, Leon Bailey and Paulo Dybala. In fact, for a team with those players and Gasperini as coach, 10 goals in 9 matches can be considered a poor return. Or will they ominously kick into gear and get better?

So who’s been the star of Serie A so far this season? It’s hard to choose. And that’s the beauty of the league this season, it’s imperfections. Even the best team has something wrong with it, has a ventilation duct on their Death Star, has a minor flaw. That has left the league wide open and at the (almost) quarter way through stage leaves us with a top 4 separated by only 5 points. The title race in Italy is wide open, and it’s because no one’s perfect.

















