Cremonese host Torino in Serie A on Sunday afternoon, 19 April 2026, with both clubs still trying to make the final weeks of the season count for something more than mid-table drift. For Cremonese, it’s about survival and damage limitation. They sit 17th on 27 points, only just above the drop zone by reputation if not by comfort, and every home game carries a bit of edge now. For Torino, 13th place and 39 points leaves them in safer water, but not exactly at ease. They’d love a strong run to finish the campaign and put some gloss on a messy defensive record.
There’s a proper story attached to the numbers. Cremonese have spent most of the spring fighting uphill, and Marco Giampaolo’s side need something to change quickly if they’re going to stop looking over their shoulder. Torino, under Roberto D’Aversa, have been a more volatile proposition than their league position suggests: capable of beating Lazio and Verona, yet also open enough to let games get away from them. That mix usually produces goals. It’s why the market has landed on Both Teams To Score, and why this one feels more open than the table might first suggest.
The recent head-to-head is also leaning one way. Torino have already beaten Cremonese 1-0 this season, and they’ve taken points — or all of them — in a long stretch of meetings. That won’t bother Cremonese much on Sunday unless they can finally turn home pressure into something tangible. Easier said than done.
Cremonese Form & Analysis
Cremonese’s last six matches read like a team struggling to keep its head above water. They went to Cagliari on 11 April and came away with a narrow 1-0 defeat, and the performance matched the scoreline: little possession, very little threat, and only a couple of attempts on target. Before that, Bologna left their ground with a 2-1 win on 5 April, which stung because Cremonese had hoped their home patch might steady them. It didn’t. The one bright spot in this stretch was the 2-0 win away at Parma on 21 March, a result that briefly hinted at a turning point. It hasn’t stuck. Since then, it’s been back to familiar frustrations.
The rest of the sequence tells the same story. Fiorentina ran out 4-1 winners in Cremona, Milan beat them 2-0 at home, and Lecce edged them 2-1 away. That’s five defeats in six, and the one win came on the road. Not ideal. There’s no real rhythm here, no sign of a side putting together the kind of run that lifts a relegation fight. They’ve conceded first far too often and have been chasing games more than controlling them. When a team with 26 league goals all season starts behind, you know the problem.
Their home record underlines it. Cremonese have won only twice at their own ground, drawn six and lost seven, with 13 goals scored and 23 conceded. That’s a shaky base for any side, never mind one sitting 17th. The attack isn’t hopeless — they can find a goal here and there — but it’s thin stuff, and the defence gives too much away. Even at home, where they should be a bit more aggressive, they’ve looked vulnerable between the lines and soft once the first setback arrives. You’d expect them to have spells in this match. You wouldn’t trust them to hold one for long.
Torino Form & Analysis
Torino come into this off a 2-1 home win over Hellas Verona on 11 April, and that result summed them up pretty well. They started fast, let Verona hang around, then had to ride out a messy second half after the game opened up. The win mattered because it followed a 1-0 success at Pisa on 5 April, which was a proper away job: disciplined, efficient, done. That little two-game unbeaten run on the road and overall is useful, because it’s exactly the sort of sequence that gives a side like Torino confidence without pretending they’re suddenly polished.
Before that, though, there was a wobble. They lost 3-2 at Milan on 21 March in a game that got loose and stayed loose, and that’s the problem with this team — they can get dragged into chaos far too easily. Parma were brushed aside 4-1 at home on 13 March, Napoli beat them 2-1 away on 6 March, and Lazio were undone 2-0 in Turin on 1 March. So yes, there’s plenty of inconsistency. But there’s also a side that can score in bursts and cause trouble when they get the first punch in. That matters here.
Torino’s away record is decent without being spectacular: four wins, four draws and eight defeats, with 16 goals scored and 30 conceded. The away goals tally is good enough to keep them in games, and that’s the key point for a BTTS angle. They’re not the kind of team that shuts matches down on the road. Far from it. They’ve shipped 30 away goals in Serie A, which is a heavy number, and even when they win, the defensive line often gives the opposition something to work with. They’ve also shown a habit of getting on the scoresheet away from home — exactly the sort of profile that keeps a match alive even when the home side is struggling.
Still, Torino’s attacking edge can’t be ignored. They’ve got 37 league goals overall, more than Cremonese’s 26, and their last few outings suggest a team capable of creating enough chances to score against weaker opponents. The flip side? They’re open enough to let opponents in as well. That’s why this trip doesn’t feel like a safe away-day. It feels like one of those matches where Torino should score, probably do, but don’t fully control the script.
Head-to-Head
Torino have had Cremonese’s number for a while now. They won the reverse league fixture 1-0 on 13 December 2025, and the broader pattern is just as one-sided. Torino have gone nine meetings without losing to Cremonese, which is a strong psychological edge even if some of those meetings were in different competitions or friendlies. The 2023 Serie A draw in Turin was the exception that proved the rule. Torino were also 2-1 winners in Cremona in August 2022.
That history matters because it’s not just about results, it’s about tone. Torino have tended to land the first blow and make Cremonese chase. In this fixture, that has usually been enough. Cremonese have scored against them before — they’ve not been shut out every time — but Torino have kept control of the narrative more often than not. Don’t expect that pattern to scare off a BTTS bet. If anything, it helps it. A match that regularly leans Torino and still leaves room for both sides to score is exactly where that market finds value.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/5 here, and it’s a solid enough price for a game that looks more likely to produce chances than caution. Cremonese’s home record is poor, but they do get the odd goal, and Torino’s away form is built on open matches rather than clean, controlled shutouts. The xG projection of 1.4 to 1.3 points to a contest with chances at both ends, and the 59% model probability gives the bet a fair edge over the odds.
The cleanest read is 1-1. Cremonese aren’t strong enough to be trusted for a home win, but they’re just dangerous enough to nick one, especially if Torino’s back line gets drawn into the sort of loose, end-to-end game they’ve already had plenty of this season. Torino should score too. They’ve done it often enough away from home, and Cremonese’s habit of conceding first makes that even more likely. If you want a second angle, over 2.5 goals isn’t ridiculous, but BTTS feels tidier and less dependent on one team running away with it.