Frosinone and Palermo meet at the sharp end of Serie B on Friday evening, 10 April 2026, with both clubs sitting inside the automatic-promotion picture and the pressure rising with every round. Frosinone are second on 68 points, Palermo are fourth on 64, and this one carries real weight for the top end of the table. A home win would give Massimiliano Alvini’s side a proper cushion in the chase for promotion. Palermo, under Filippo Inzaghi, know a result in Lazio keeps them right in the mix and stops the gap from opening up.
There’s a good deal of tension around it too, because these two have both spent most of the season looking like serious contenders rather than hopeful outsiders. Frosinone have the stronger overall record, conceding only 32 league goals, while Palermo arrive with the division’s tighter defensive numbers on 27 against. That’s the sort of contrast that usually makes for a proper game. Frosinone have been the more explosive side in front of goal, though, and at home they’ve made life very hard for visitors.
Recent history between the sides has not been wild, but the current form lines point to a contest with enough threat at both ends. Frosinone are unbeaten in ten league matches. Palermo have won three of their last four and come in with confidence too. The question is simple enough: can Frosinone’s attacking edge tilt a promotion battle in their favour, or will Palermo’s organisation and road nous keep things tight?
Frosinone Form & Analysis
Frosinone arrive in good shape, and that’s putting it mildly. Their last six league matches have been a story of control and resilience: a 2-2 draw away to Pescara, a 3-0 home win over Sampdoria, a 2-2 draw at Cesena, then a 2-1 home victory against Bari, a 3-1 success at Südtirol, and finally a clean 2-0 win over Padova at home on 5 April. That’s four wins and two draws, all while keeping the unbeaten run rolling on to ten matches since that February defeat to Venezia. They’re hard to stop right now.
The Padova game summed up a lot of what Frosinone have been about lately. They weren’t just winning; they were pinning opponents back. The xG was 2.64 to 0.92, they fired 24 shots to 11, and they forced eight efforts on target. Antonio Raimondo and Francesco Gelli scored inside the first half-hour and the match was basically theirs from there. That wasn’t a smash-and-grab. It was a proper assertion of authority. And at home, that’s been the pattern. Their league record at this ground reads 10 wins, 4 draws and only 2 losses, with 33 goals scored and 14 conceded. Strong stuff.
There are a couple of details that matter here. Frosinone have scored in almost every direction this season, and their overall tally of 64 goals is the best of the two teams. They’ve also been decent first-half starters, which helps explain why so many games become theirs early. Still, they’re not flawless. The two home draws against Pescara and Sampdoria showed they can be made to sweat if opponents stay alive long enough. That won’t shock anyone. Yet with 33 goals at home and a recent habit of turning control into points, they look well placed to ask plenty of questions again.
Palermo Form & Analysis
Palermo have been pretty solid themselves, even if their path has had more bumps in it. Their last six have brought a 2-0 home win over US Avellino 1912, a 1-0 away victory at Padova, a 2-2 draw at home to Juve Stabia, a rough 3-0 defeat away to Monza, then narrow wins at Carrarese and at home to Mantova. That’s three wins from the last four after the Monza setback. Not bad at all. They’ve responded well to setbacks and haven’t allowed that heavy loss in Lombardy to spiral into anything worse.
The recent clean sheet against Avellino was tidy, but the numbers were more interesting than the scoreline alone. Palermo only managed 0.68 xG and still kept the game under control, with the opponents restricted to 0.11 xGA. That’s a reminder of what Inzaghi’s side can do when they settle into a match. They’re compact, they’re patient, and they don’t often give away much. That defensive edge is a big reason they’ve conceded just 27 league goals all season, the best mark in this game. Their away record is no accident either: 6 wins, 6 draws and 4 defeats, with 21 scored and 17 conceded. Useful. Nothing flashy, but very live.
The flip side is that Palermo’s away numbers don’t scream domination. They’re capable, not irresistible. A 3-0 defeat at Monza exposed what happens when they lose control, and a 0-1 win at Padova in their last away outing tells you they’re often in tight, low-margin affairs on the road. They’ll be happy to keep this one disciplined and ugly for long spells. Mind you, that isn’t always enough against a side like Frosinone, who can change a game quickly when the tempo lifts. Palermo have the tools to stay in it. They just don’t always turn away matches into attacks of their own.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has leaned away from chaos lately. Palermo beat Frosinone 2-0 in May 2025, and the two sides drew 0-0 in Palermo at the start of this season. Before that, there was a 1-1 draw in Frosinone in November 2024. Go back a little further and you find more split results, but the recent pattern is the one that matters most. These teams have generally respected each other’s structure.
There’s also a notable trend in the meetings: goals haven’t exactly flown in. The last six head-to-heads have all stayed under 2.5 goals, and that’s hard to ignore when you’re trying to price up a market. Still, this match feels a shade more open than some of those old cagey meetings because both clubs are scoring more freely now than they did in past versions of this rivalry. That changes the tone a bit.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/6 for this one. It’s short enough to demand respect, but the case is pretty clear. Frosinone have hit 64 league goals, are unbeaten in ten, and have scored three, two and three in three of their last five before the Padova shutout. Palermo, for their part, have only gone two games without scoring in the last six and have enough away quality to nick a goal even if they spend long spells on the back foot.
The 2-1 Frosinone correct score feels right. The home side should have enough thrust to edge it, especially with their record at this ground and the way they’ve started matches in recent weeks. But Palermo aren’t the type to roll over, and their away record suggests they’ll keep the contest alive. If you wanted a saver, Frosinone to score first is live too. That said, the main angle here is goals. Three of them would fit the flow perfectly.