Torino return to the Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino on Saturday afternoon knowing this is one of those fixtures they simply have to take care of. Roberto D'Aversa's side sit 12th in Serie A with 36 points from 31 matches, not exactly gazing up at Europe but not fully clear of anxiety either. A home game against 19th-placed Hellas Verona is the sort of match that shapes the tone of a run-in. Win it, and Torino can breathe a little easier. Fail to, and the questions start again.
For Verona, the stakes are even sharper. Paolo Sammarco's side are deep in trouble on 18 points, with only three league wins all season and a goal difference of 22 scored, 53 conceded that tells its own ugly story. Time is running out. Fast. They don't have the luxury of treating away trips to mid-table teams as free hits anymore. Every point matters now, and every defeat leaves the gap to safety looking wider.
There is also recent history hanging over this fixture. Torino have had the better of Verona for a while and already won the reverse meeting 3-0 in January. That matters. So does current form. Torino have been erratic in a frustrating way — win one, lose one, repeat — but Verona's pattern is much darker, with defeat becoming the default setting. Strip it back and this looks like a side with enough punch at home facing a side that spends too much of matches chasing the game.
Torino Form & Analysis
Torino's last six results tell a strange story, but not a hopeless one. They've alternated between wins and losses in that run, beating Pisa 1-0 away last weekend after the international break, losing 3-2 at Milan before that, then hammering Parma 4-1 at home. Go back a little further and there's a solid 2-0 home win over Lazio, sandwiched by away defeats at Napoli and Genoa. So yes, they're inconsistent. But there's a clear split here: when Torino get the right opponent, especially at home, they can look forceful and pretty ruthless.
The win at Pisa was more convincing than the scoreline suggests. Torino posted 1.83 xG to just 0.32 against, had 13 shots to seven, and allowed almost nothing of real note. It took until the 80th minute for Che Adams to break the deadlock, assisted by Marcus Pedersen, but the control was there long before the goal arrived. That's often how these D'Aversa teams work when they're on top — not always slick, not always explosive, but they squeeze territory and wait for the opening. Against a Verona side that has developed a nasty habit of conceding first, that sort of patience should count for plenty.
At home, Torino's record is decent without being dazzling: six wins, two draws and seven defeats from 15 league games, with 19 goals scored and 23 conceded. That's the one concern. They haven't exactly turned their own ground into a fortress. Still, their better recent performances have come there. The 4-1 win over Parma was their most complete attacking display in weeks, while the 2-0 victory over Lazio showed they can shut down capable sides as well. The broader season numbers aren't pretty — 35 scored and 53 conceded overall — yet the recent xG projection for this match, 1.35 to 0.56 in Torino's favour, fits the eye test. This should be a game in which they create the better openings.
They also tend to drag matches into a shape that suits a home favourite against a struggler. Torino have seen over 2.5 goals in seven of their last nine, which hints at volatility, but this particular matchup doesn't scream chaos. Not this time. If they start well and get in front, they should be able to manage the contest far more comfortably than they did at Milan or Napoli.
Hellas Verona Form & Analysis
Verona come into this in miserable form, and there isn't much point dressing it up. They've lost five of their last six league matches, with the only exception a 2-1 win away at Bologna on 8 March. Since then, they've gone down 2-0 at home to Genoa, lost 1-0 at Atalanta, and then suffered another 1-0 defeat at home to Fiorentina last weekend. Before that came a 2-1 home loss to Napoli and a 3-0 beating at Sassuolo. That's three defeats on the bounce, no goals scored across those three games, and a side that looks short on belief as much as quality.
The Fiorentina result was especially painful because Verona actually played well enough to get something. They finished with 21 shots to Fiorentina's five and hit the target eight times to one, while the xG numbers read 0.98 to 0.36. On another day, that ends 1-0 to Verona. Instead they conceded in the 82nd minute, then saw Tomáš Suslov sent off three minutes later in a chaotic ending that summed up their season: a lot of effort, very little reward, then a self-inflicted complication right at the death. Those are the margins when you're down near the bottom, and Verona keep ending up on the wrong side of them.
Their away record is poor even by relegation-battle standards. Two wins, five draws and nine defeats from 16 league trips, just 10 goals scored and 29 conceded. That's the worst away ranking in the division. The lack of attacking threat jumps off the page. Ten away goals in 16 matches is nowhere near enough, and their overall total of 22 in 31 league games is second-rate stuff for a side trying to survive. They've also failed to keep a clean sheet in seven straight matches and, even more damning, they've conceded first in each of their last seven. That's no way to live on the road.
Can they make this awkward? Maybe for a while. The win at Bologna proves they can spring a surprise, and the narrow defeats to Atalanta and Fiorentina weren't capitulations. But this team lives too close to the edge. They don't score enough, they concede too early, and when pressure moments arrive they tend to blink. Against a Torino side that won't mind a low-tempo game and already knows it can hurt Verona, that feels like a bad mix.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings lean heavily Torino's way. They won 3-0 in Verona on 4 January, had already beaten Verona 3-2 away in September 2024, and edged them 2-1 and 1-0 in the two meetings before that. There have been a couple of draws mixed in — 1-1 in Turin last April and 0-0 in October 2023 — but the broad picture is pretty clear: Torino have had this fixture under control for a while.
One angle is enough here. Torino are unbeaten in 13 straight meetings with Verona, and that sort of run isn't an accident. Stylistically, this looks like a matchup they understand. They don't need to dominate the ball for long spells, and they don't need a barrage of chances. They just need to stay patient and make the first goal count.
We Predict: Home Win
Home Win at 1.85 is the play here. Torino don't need to be spectacular to justify that price. Verona have lost three league games in a row without scoring, they've conceded first in seven straight matches, and their away return of 10 goals in 16 games is dreadful. Put simply, they ask too little of opponents.
Torino aren't reliable enough to trust blindly against stronger sides, but this is different. They beat Pisa away with authority last week, have already put three past Verona in this fixture this season, and the xG projection of 1.35 to 0.56 points to a game where the hosts should control the better chances. The correct-score call of 1-0 feels right. Tight, maybe even scrappy, but still a Torino win.
If you wanted a secondary angle, under 2.5 goals has some appeal given Verona's blunt attack and the projected low away xG. Mind you, the stronger position remains the straight home win — because Verona's biggest issue isn't just that they lose, it's that they struggle to land enough blows to change the script.