Sampdoria host Monza at the Luigi Ferraris on Friday evening, 17 April 2026, with Serie B entering the part of the season where every point starts to feel heavier. For Sampdoria, it’s about dragging themselves clear of mid-table drift and finishing with some pride after a mixed campaign. For Monza, it’s a different picture entirely. They’re sitting third and chasing the kind of finish that keeps promotion hopes alive, maybe even pushes them towards a better playoff route.
There’s a proper contrast here. Sampdoria are 12th on 40 points, still too close to the middle for comfort and not quite safe from being sucked into the noise below them. Monza, on 69 points, have been one of the division’s more reliable sides all season, with a tight defence and a habit of collecting points even when they don’t quite hit top gear. That said, this isn’t a free hit for the visitors. Sampdoria have been decent at home, and Monza haven’t exactly turned away days into a procession.
The recent meeting history gives the tie a bit of bite too. Monza beat Sampdoria 1-0 in September 2025 in Serie B, and they’d also won 3-0 in Genoa back in 2022 when both clubs were in Serie A. Sampdoria haven’t had much luck getting through Monza’s structure lately. Can they change that here? They’ll need to be sharper than they were in some earlier home displays.
Sampdoria Form & Analysis
Sampdoria’s recent run has been a strange one. They’ve taken three wins from their last four league games, which would normally sound like a team surging, but the broader picture still feels patchy. Away at Pescara on 11 April, they found a way to win 2-1 late on after a match that had a bit of everything, including a VAR-awarded penalty and a stoppage-time finish from Fabio Depaoli. Before that, they beat Empoli 1-0 at home, then edged US Avellino 1912 2-1 at the Luigi Ferraris. It’s been effective rather than elegant.
The dip shows up when you rewind a little further. They lost 2-0 away to Carrarese, drew 0-0 at home to Venezia, and were beaten 3-0 at Frosinone. That’s the Sampdoria problem in one neat stretch: capable of nicking games when the margins are kind, but also vulnerable when they’re asked to go on the front foot for long periods. There’s no real comfort in that. Not against a promotion contender.
Their home record is respectable, though, and that’s a major reason they’re not lower down the table. Eight wins, five draws and four defeats at home is solid enough, with 21 goals scored and 17 conceded in Genoa. They’ve been harder to break down at the Ferraris than away from it, and that matters here. Still, 21 goals in 17 home games isn’t exactly a statement. They’ve got a decent platform, not a ruthless attack. You’d expect them to score, but not necessarily to control the game.
The xG from the Pescara win — 2.26 for, 0.58 against — was a strong reminder that when Sampdoria get it right, they can create plenty. But the season-long picture says they’re not consistent enough to bank on that kind of output every week. Attilio Lombardo’s side have the spirit to stay in matches. What they don’t have, at least not often enough, is the habit of finishing teams off early and taking the heat out of the contest.
Monza Form & Analysis
Monza arrive in Genoa in much stronger shape, and their recent form reads like a side that knows exactly what it is. They beat Bari 2-0 at home on 11 April, controlling the game from start to finish and barely giving up a sight of goal. Pedro Obiang and Matteo Pessina got the goals, but the bigger message was in the balance of the performance: 18 shots to seven, eight on target to none, and an xG split of 2.08 to 0.22. That’s not scrambling. That’s authority.
Before that, they drew 1-1 at Catanzaro, shared a 1-1 with Venezia at home, and were held 0-0 at Reggiana. None of those results are damaging in isolation, but they do tell you Monza have been operating within a fairly tight scoring range. They’re not blowing teams away every other week. They’re just very hard to beat. That five-match unbeaten run since the loss at Spezia in early March has kept them right in the promotion mix, and the return to winning ways against Bari was timely.
Their away record is strong enough to back up that standing. Seven wins, six draws and four defeats on the road, with 22 goals scored and 17 conceded, is the sort of away profile that keeps a team near the top. They’re balanced rather than reckless. Paolo Bianco’s side don’t seem to mind ugly away days either, which is often what separates the serious promotion candidates from the hopefuls. They’ve got enough quality to hurt you, but they’re equally comfortable grinding out a point.
Mind you, there is a small warning sign. Monza have been involved in a few lower-scoring away games lately, and the recent draw sequence hints at a team that sometimes settles rather than kills. That doesn’t make them easy to oppose, but it does make a tight contest more likely than a wide-open one. Their defensive numbers remain excellent across the season — just 27 conceded from 34 matches — and that’s the foundation of everything they do.
Head-to-Head
These two have crossed paths only a few times in the recent record, but the pattern leans Monza’s way. They beat Sampdoria 1-0 in the reverse fixture in September 2025, and earlier meetings in Serie A also went their way in Genoa, with a 3-0 away win in October 2022 before a 2-2 draw in Monza a few months later.
That’s enough to suggest Sampdoria haven’t found a clean solution to Monza’s style. Monza tend to stay organised, keep the game narrow and make chances hard to come by. Sampdoria, in turn, have gone three meetings without a clean sheet against them. That little trend matters here.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 for this one. It’s a fair price for a match that should sit somewhere between control and resistance. Monza have the better season, the stronger away record and the tighter defence, but Sampdoria are good enough at home to land a punch. They’ve scored 21 times at the Ferraris and have won three of their last four overall. They won’t vanish.
The 1-1 correct score looks right. Monza’s away set-up usually keeps them competitive, but Sampdoria have enough recent momentum to get on the board, especially in front of their own crowd. At the same time, Monza’s discipline and the low-scoring lean in several of their recent away matches point away from a crazy shootout. If you wanted a side angle, under 3.5 goals fits the same general read. Still, BTTS is the cleaner call.