Südtirol host Modena in Serie B on Saturday afternoon, 11 April 2026, with both sides still chasing something meaningful in the closing stretch of the season. For Südtirol, the picture is fairly simple: they’re sitting 10th on 39 points, safely away from immediate danger but not quite close enough to dream too loudly about the play-off places. Modena are in a stronger position altogether, sixth with 50 points, and every result now matters in the scramble for the upper end of the table and a place in the promotion race.
This is the kind of game that can tilt a run-in. Südtirol have spent the season living on fine margins, while Modena arrive with a better points return and more attacking punch. Andrea Sottil’s side have been in the mix around the top six for most of the campaign, and that gives this trip a sharper edge. Take three points here and they keep the pressure on those above them. Leave with nothing and the pack tightens again.
There’s also a recent head-to-head thread worth keeping in mind. The sides met in November and drew 0-0 in Modena, just as they did in December 2024. Südtirol have avoided defeat in three of the last four league meetings, which is enough to warn against treating this like a straightforward away banker. Still, Modena’s league position and away record make them the more convincing side on paper. The question is whether they can turn that into a result in a fixture that often stays tight.
Südtirol Form & Analysis
Südtirol come into this one without much momentum, and that’s putting it politely. Their last six league matches tell the story of a side struggling to put wins together: a 1-1 draw at Cesena on 6 April, a 1-3 home defeat to Frosinone, a 2-3 loss away to US Avellino 1912, a goalless home draw with Pescara, a 0-1 home defeat to Virtus Entella, and then that impressive 4-0 away win at Reggiana on 3 March. One big away performance, a few gritty draws, and then too many flat afternoons. That’s been the pattern.
What stands out is how little margin they’ve had at home. Südtirol’s home record is 5 wins, 5 draws and 6 losses, with 17 goals scored and 16 conceded. That’s not a ground opponents fear. It’s competitive enough, sure, but not dominant. They’ve tended to keep games close in Bolzano, though not always in a good way, because too many of those tight matches have drifted away from them late on or after they’ve failed to get a foothold. Five home wins from 16 doesn’t scream reliability.
There is at least some defensive structure in that home split, and the overall season numbers aren’t disastrous. Südtirol have scored 35 and conceded 36 in the league, so they’ve been in plenty of matches. But they’re now five without a win, and that’s the real concern. They’ve also gone three games without a clean sheet, which fits the wider picture: they can hang around, but they’re not shutting the door often enough. Fabrizio Castori will demand more bite. Without it, they’ll spend too much time chasing the game rather than shaping it.
Modena Form & Analysis
Modena’s form has been more volatile than their league standing might suggest, but they still arrive with a stronger sense of purpose. Their last six league games began with a 1-3 loss away to Bari on 6 April, and that defeat will sting because they actually had enough moments to stay in it. Before that, they beat Mantova 2-1 at home, swept Spezia aside 3-0 at home, drew 0-0 with Cesena, then slipped at Virtus Entella and lost at home to Padova. So it’s been a mixed run — a bit of everything — but the ceiling has been much higher than Südtirol’s.
Andrea Sottil’s side have been better away from home than the overall recent sequence perhaps suggests. Their league away record stands at 6 wins, 4 draws and 5 losses, with 18 goals scored and 14 conceded. That’s a healthy return and it’s the sort of away profile that travels well in Serie B. They’re not just nicking points, either. When Modena are good, they can really stretch teams. The 3-0 win over Spezia was a proper statement, and even in defeat at Bari they created chances, had more shots, and kept the match lively right until the end. That won’t comfort them much after a loss, but it does matter here.
The bigger picture is that Modena have scored 43 league goals and conceded only 28, so they’ve been one of the more balanced sides in the division. They’re not reckless. They can control phases of games, and they’ve got enough threat to hurt a home side that’s been leaking goals without being wide open. There’s still a slight warning sign, though: recent results have been a little erratic, and they’ve now lost their last match. Can they reset quickly on the road? That’s the key question. If they’re switched on, they’ve got the better tools. If they’re sloppy, Südtirol will drag them into a scrap.
Head-to-Head
These two don’t usually serve up chaos when they meet. The last two league games in Modena finished 0-0, which says plenty about the way both teams can approach each other when points are on the line. Südtirol did beat Modena 2-1 at home in August 2024, but the broader pattern is far less open than many Serie B fixtures. In five of the last six league meetings, there’s been under 2.5 goals. That’s not a coincidence.
Südtirol have also managed to avoid defeat in three of the last four league encounters, so Modena won’t be expecting an easy afternoon just because they’re higher in the table. The historical edge is thin, not decisive. This fixture tends to stay tense, and that usually drags the scoring down.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 4/11 looks the strongest angle here. Modena are the better side, the better scorers, and the side with the more convincing away record. That’s the cleanest read. Südtirol’s home numbers are fine, but not strong enough to make them a trustworthy favourite, especially when they’ve gone five league matches without a win and have struggled to keep opponents out. Modena don’t need to dominate to land this bet. They just need to avoid defeat.
The expected pattern feels narrow. A 1-1 scoreline fits the mood of the fixture, and it fits the projection too, with Südtirol around 1.0 xG and Modena about 1.1. That leaves very little between them. Still, Modena’s attacking ceiling is higher, and they’ve been involved in several open games on the road this season. If they sharpen up after the loss at Bari, they should have enough to leave with at least a point. An away win isn’t out of the question, but the safety of X2 is the play.
For a more adventurous angle, under 2.5 goals wouldn’t be out of place given how often this pairing has stayed tight. Even so, the double chance is the more sensible route. No need to overcomplicate it.