Carrarese welcome Pescara to Serie B on Sunday afternoon with very different pressures hanging over the two clubs. Antonio Calabro’s side sit 10th on 42 points and are trying to turn a solid season into something a bit more ambitious, while Giorgio Gorgone’s Pescara arrive stuck in 20th on 32 points and still looking over their shoulders. One team is chasing a comfortable finish and, if the table opens up, maybe a late push upward. The other is simply trying to pull clear of the mess at the bottom.
It’s the sort of fixture that can swing on attitude as much as quality. Carrarese have been sturdy at home all season, and Pescara have been lively enough to trouble anyone but too fragile to trust. That combination usually points one way. Still, these two have a habit of producing goals when they meet, and that’s the angle worth keeping in mind.
The backdrop is simple enough: Carrarese are the steadier side, Pescara the more volatile one. Calabro’s men have earned their 42 points through balance rather than fireworks, while Pescara’s 47 goals scored are dragged down badly by 61 conceded. That’s a rough trade. On paper, it leaves this game with one obvious question — can the away side keep Carrarese quiet enough to stay in it?
Carrarese Form & Analysis
Carrarese come into this on the back of a narrow away defeat at Reggiana, and that loss hasn’t done much to shake the bigger picture. Before that, they put together a fine run: a 3-1 home win over Spezia, a highly impressive 3-0 success away at Bari, and a 2-0 victory against Sampdoria in front of their own fans. Go back one more and there was a 1-1 draw at Juve Stabia. The only recent blemish before Reggiana was a 1-0 home loss to Palermo. That’s a decent month’s work by any standard. Not perfect. But solid, and a lot better than most teams around them.
What stands out is how often Carrarese have controlled games at home. Their home record reads seven wins, six draws and only four defeats, with 24 goals scored and just 15 conceded. That’s a proper base. They don’t need to blast teams away to win there; they’re good at keeping shape, staying patient and picking moments. The Spezia and Sampdoria wins showed that clearly, and even in the 0-1 loss to Palermo they weren’t blown off the pitch. Three goals at home against Spezia was no fluke either. Calabro’s side can open teams up when the game allows it.
The slight concern is that Carrarese haven’t become a ruthless side. Their overall record of 10 wins, 12 draws and 12 defeats says as much. They’re well organised, but not always decisive. That matters here because Pescara rarely arrive quietly. Carrarese should feel confident, though. At home they’ve only conceded 15 all season, which is a strong defensive return at this level, and if they settle early they’ll back themselves to create enough. The numbers suggest they’re far more comfortable on their own pitch than away from it. That counts for plenty.
Pescara Form & Analysis
Pescara’s recent run has been a proper mixed bag, which is exactly why they sit where they do. They beat Reggiana 3-1 away on 6 April, a result that briefly hinted at a turn, then followed it with a painful 2-1 home loss to Sampdoria. Before that, they were beaten 4-2 at Empoli, though they did beat Virtus Entella 3-0 at home in the middle of those games. Add in a 0-0 draw at Südtirol and a 4-0 home thumping of Bari, and you get the picture: they can score, they can be sharp, and they can also fall apart far too easily. That’s Pescara in a nutshell.
Away from home, the numbers are the real problem. Two wins, six draws and nine defeats is not the sort of record that inspires much confidence, and the defensive tally is even worse: 37 conceded on the road. That’s a hefty burden for any side to carry. They do have 21 away goals, so they’re not useless going forward, and they’ve shown they can nick something when games open up. But the balance is poor. You can usually get at them. And if the hosts start on top, Pescara haven’t shown much evidence they can ride it out for long.
The home loss to Sampdoria was a neat summary of their issues. They actually made a bit of a game of it, scoring late through Antonio Di Nardo’s penalty, but the underlying numbers were ugly enough: only 0.58 expected goals and 2.26 against. That’s not control, that’s hanging on. On their day, Pescara can blow teams away — Bari and Virtus Entella found that out — but on the road they’ve been too open and too easy to unsettle. Can they go to Carrarese and stay compact for 90 minutes? You wouldn’t bet heavily on it.
Head-to-Head
These two have been meeting regularly enough to build a clear pattern, and it’s one Pescara won’t enjoy reading. The last six head-to-heads have produced plenty of goals, and Carrarese haven’t lost any of the most recent five. The reverse fixture in October finished 2-2 in Pescara, and that came after a 2-2 draw there in Serie C in March 2024, a 1-0 Carrarese home win in November 2023, another 2-2 in the 2022 play-offs, a 1-1 draw earlier that year, and a 2-1 Pescara win back in 2021.
The more useful angle is the scoring trend. Five of the last six meetings have seen both teams score, and Pescara haven’t kept a clean sheet in any of those recent clashes. That lines up neatly with the current picture. Carrarese are stronger at home, Pescara are loose away from home, and their meetings have generally been open enough for both attacks to get a look in. That won’t surprise anyone who’s followed these sides.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/13 here, and it’s a fair price for a game that points towards goals at both ends. Carrarese’s home record is strong enough to expect them to find a way through, while Pescara have scored in five of their last six league games and still carry enough threat to nick one even when they’re poor. The head-to-head record helps too: five of the last six meetings have landed this selection, and Pescara’s habit of leaking chances away from home keeps bringing the same problem back.
The scoreline call is 1-1. That fits the shape of the fixture nicely. Carrarese should have the better of the game for long spells, but Pescara have enough punch to make life awkward, and a draw wouldn’t be a shock if the visitors manage to stay in touch for the first hour. Still, with Carrarese conceding only 15 at home all season and Pescara giving up 37 away, there’s a decent chance the hosts edge the balance without turning it into a comfortable win. If you want a tighter alternative, Carrarese draw no bet deserves a look, but BTTS is the sharper call.