Modena host Frosinone at the Stadio Alberto Braglia on Saturday afternoon in a Serie B meeting that matters at both ends of the promotion conversation. Modena sit sixth with 52 points, clinging to a play-off place but still needing to keep the chasing pack at arm’s length. Frosinone are third on 69 points and firmly in the automatic-promotion mix. There’s a proper edge to this one. One side is trying to protect momentum and a top-six berth; the other is trying to stay in touch with the front-runners.
It’s also a meeting between two teams who’ve built their seasons on different shapes of consistency. Modena have been steady, even stubborn at home, while Frosinone have been a problem for almost everyone away from home. Andrea Sottil’s side have enough control to make life awkward, but Massimiliano Alvini’s team arrive with a longer unbeaten run and the league’s best away record. That’s a dangerous combination.
The game lands at a point in the campaign when every dropped point matters. Modena can’t afford to drift. Frosinone, with only three league defeats all season, are looking like a side that expects to take something from most trips. Can Modena slow them down? That’s the real question.
Modena Form & Analysis
Modena’s recent run has been a mixed bag, though not a disastrous one. They’ve taken just one win from their last six, but the results haven’t been flat-out poor. A 0-0 draw at home to Cesena was followed by a strong 3-0 win against Spezia, then a narrow 2-1 success over Mantova at the Braglia. Since then, they’ve gone without a win in three, first losing 3-1 away to Bari, then drawing 1-1 at Südtirol and 2-2 at Catanzaro. That last result, on 14 April, came with a late Pedro Mendes equaliser in stoppage time. It had the feel of a point rescued rather than two thrown away.
There’s been a pattern in that sequence. Modena have kept themselves in games, but they’re not controlling them for long enough. The draw at Catanzaro was lively enough — xG of 1.25 to 1.18, only eight shots apiece, and a genuine end-to-end feel — while the 1-1 at Südtirol was tighter and more attritional. The 3-1 loss at Bari, on the other hand, exposed the other side of the coin: when their shape breaks, they can be opened up. Still, they’ve scored in five of those six matches. That matters.
At home, Modena have a decent platform to work from. Their record at the Braglia is eight wins, four draws and five defeats, with 25 goals scored and 14 conceded. That’s not a fortress, but it’s respectable and built on control rather than chaos. They’ve only lost once in their last three home league games, and they’ve already shown they can put together a proper performance there, as the 3-0 win over Spezia and the 2-1 victory against Mantova proved. The downside is just as clear: they’ve gone without a clean sheet in four straight league matches, and even at home they can be drawn into a scrap. That’s not the profile of a side you’d fully trust to shut a stronger opponent out.
The numbers fit the eye test. Modena aren’t short of goals, but they’ve been too open lately. Four of their last six have seen both teams score, and their home record suggests a side that likes to play on the front foot without always locking the door behind them. If they’re going to trouble Frosinone, they’ll almost certainly need to score. Sitting back won’t be enough. That won’t be enough.
Frosinone Form & Analysis
Frosinone come into this in a far healthier place. They’ve gone 11 league matches unbeaten since the loss to Venezia in early February, and the last six have brought four wins and two draws. The latest outing, a 1-1 home draw with Palermo on 10 April, was a little more subdued than their recent high-tempo work. They were held after goals from Giacomo Calò and Filippo Ranocchia late on, and the underlying numbers were oddly modest for a side of their standing: 0.49 xG, 0.65 xGA. That was not their cleanest display. Still, they found a way to avoid defeat. Again.
Before that, they handled Padova 2-0 at home, came from the road with a 3-1 win at Südtirol, and beat Bari 2-1 at home. The 2-2 draw at Cesena was a warning that they can be dragged into open games away from home, but it didn’t stop the run. The 3-0 victory over Sampdoria on 8 March was the kind of statement result that underlines why they’re sitting third. They’re not relying on one style or one result. They’ve been winning in different ways, which is what promotion candidates do.
Their away record is the headline here. Frosinone have collected 34 points on the road, with nine wins, seven draws and just one defeat. That’s the best away record in the division by some distance, and the 31 goals scored away from home tell you they’re not just getting by on shutouts. They’ve scored in bunches, they’ve scored late, and they’ve usually found a way to stay in control. Only one away loss all season. That’s outrageous consistency. The flip side? They’ve also conceded 18 away from home, so they’re not impenetrable. There’s usually a route into them, especially if the game gets stretched.
Massimiliano Alvini’s side look built for this sort of fixture. They’re comfortable without being boring, and aggressive without being reckless. The 1-1 against Palermo was a slight reminder that they’re not invincible, but it didn’t dent the bigger picture. They’re still unbeaten in 11, still dangerous on the road, and still finding goals. You’d expect them to score here. It would be more surprising if they didn’t.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other well enough, and the recent meetings point in a pretty clear direction. The last three Serie B meetings have all finished level: 2-2 in Frosinone in November 2025, 1-1 at Modena in January 2025 and 1-1 again in Frosinone in August 2024. That’s a decent little pattern, and it’s hard to ignore when the same teams keep trading blows without either landing the decisive punch.
Go back a bit further and Frosinone edge the longer run, but only just. They won 2-1 at home in January 2023 and 1-0 in Modena in August 2022. Even so, the current mood is more balanced than dominant. Both teams have scored in four of the last five league meetings, and that feels more relevant than any old result from years ago. These games have a habit of staying alive.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/15 here, and it’s the best angle on the board. Modena have scored in five of their last six, Frosinone have found the net in almost everything they’ve played for months, and the head-to-head is leaning the same way with BTTS landing in four of the last five meetings. There’s no clean-sheet banker in sight.
The 1-1 correct score looks the likeliest outcome. Modena have enough home resilience to stay in it, but Frosinone’s away record is too strong to back them to blank completely. Mind you, Modena aren’t shutting sides out either, so a 1-1 draw fits the shape of the fixture neatly. If you wanted a slight alternative, Frosinone to score first has appeal given their road rhythm, but BTTS is the cleaner play.