

Match form loads a moment after the page opens so the main prediction can appear first; recent results are fetched right after.
Atalanta host Genoa in Serie A on Saturday evening, 2 May 2026, with both clubs still trying to shape the final stretch of their league season. For Atalanta, seventh place and 54 points keeps European qualification very much alive, but the margin for error is thin now. Genoa sit 14th on 39 points, far enough from immediate trouble to breathe, yet not quite comfortable enough to switch off. There’s still something on the line for both sides, and that gives this one a proper edge.
For Raffaele Palladino’s Atalanta, the season has been a mix of sharp attacking spells and frustrating slip-ups. They’ve taken points off strong sides, but the gap between what they can do and what they’re actually delivering has shown up too often in recent weeks. Daniele De Rossi’s Genoa arrive with a more modest brief. They’ve done enough to stay clear of the bottom scramble, though their away form remains a concern and their recent defeat to Como at home was a reminder that they’re still vulnerable when the tempo rises.
There’s also a familiar feel to this fixture. Atalanta have had Genoa’s number for a while now, and that history matters. When a side keeps finding ways past the same opponent, confidence tends to travel with them. Genoa, meanwhile, need to prove they can keep this game tight for long enough to get something out of it. That won’t be easy.
Atalanta’s last month has been a strange one. They were beaten 1-0 at home by Juventus on 11 April, a result that felt like a missed chance, then came away from Roma with a 1-1 draw on 18 April, which was decent enough but not enough to really kick-start momentum. The trip to Cagliari on 27 April looked like a match they could control after scoring through Paul Mendy and Gianluca Scamacca, only for it to unravel in a 3-2 defeat. Between those setbacks, there was the 1-1 Coppa Italia draw with Lazio at home on 22 April, another night when they did just enough to stay alive but not enough to feel settled.
Go back a little further and the shape of the season becomes clearer. Atalanta beat Lecce 3-0 away on 6 April and had already edged Hellas Verona 1-0 at home before that. Those are the kind of results that keep a strong side in the mix, but they’ve now gone four league games without a win. That’s the worry. They’re still capable of bursts, but the rhythm isn’t there from one week to the next. The numbers at home are still solid, though: nine wins, five draws and only three defeats at their own ground, with 25 goals scored and 14 conceded. That’s the record of a team that usually asks serious questions in Bergamo. Usually.
The attack has done enough to keep them dangerous, and the home defensive numbers are decent rather than dominant. A home side scoring 25 and conceding 14 doesn’t scream chaos, but it does suggest games can open up if the opponent has a bit of nerve. Atalanta’s xG profile also points in a fairly positive direction, with a projected 1.6 goals here, and even in defeat they’ve shown they can create. The issue is control. They’ve been too easy to unsettle when the match shifts. One clean passage of play can turn into a slog very quickly.
Genoa’s recent story is more uneven, though less dramatic. They were beaten 2-0 at home by Como on 26 April, which was a flat way to come out of the blocks after the 2-1 win at Pisa a week earlier. Before that, they had beaten Sassuolo 2-1 at home on 12 April, a useful result that suggested some momentum, only to then lose 2-0 away to Juventus on 6 April. That was followed by a 2-0 home defeat to Udinese on 20 March, before the 2-0 win at Hellas Verona on 15 March gave them something to build from. Build from it they haven’t, not quite. The pattern has been too stop-start.
De Rossi’s side have collected 39 points from 34 matches and the standings reflect a fairly ordinary campaign: 10 wins, nine draws and 15 defeats, with 40 goals scored and 48 conceded. There’s enough there to show they can hurt teams, but the back line has leaked too often. Away from home, the record is even less convincing. Four wins, five draws and seven defeats, with 19 goals scored and 24 conceded on the road, is middling at best. They’re not hopeless travellers. Far from it. But they don’t carry much authority either.
The worrying part for Genoa is the recent defensive trend. They’ve gone five matches without a clean sheet, and that matters against a side like Atalanta, who rarely need many invitations. The loss to Como was especially frustrating because Genoa barely threatened enough to justify a different result, managing only one effort on target. Still, they did win at Pisa and score twice against Sassuolo, so this isn’t a team that travels solely to sit in. They’ll try to play, which is fine until the game starts asking awkward questions of their defenders. Atalanta will ask them. Plenty.
This fixture has tilted heavily one way for a long time. Atalanta beat Genoa 1-0 in Genoa on 21 December 2025, and that came after a 4-0 Coppa Italia win in Bergamo earlier that month. Last season, Atalanta won 3-2 away in May 2025, after a 5-1 home thrashing in October 2024. If you go back a little further, there’s a 4-1 win in Genoa in February 2024 and a 2-0 home success in October 2023. That’s a brutal run for Genoa to live with.
There’s a pattern here and it’s hard to ignore. Atalanta have won six of the last eight meetings listed, and they haven’t lost to Genoa in 13 straight encounters. Genoa have also gone six head-to-head games without a clean sheet, which fits the wider picture of a matchup where Atalanta usually find room. The visitors have had enough of these games by now. They’ll need something different to break the cycle.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 for this one. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the guide to BTTS betting breaks down the BTTS market and shows when both-teams-to-score bets tend to hold up best. It’s a fair price for a match that has enough attacking life on both sides, even if Atalanta are the stronger outfit overall. Their home record is strong, Genoa have scored 40 league goals this season, and the projected xG split of 1.6 to 1.2 points toward a contest where both sides should get chances rather than one where a clean sheet feels nailed on.
The 2-1 Atalanta win is the call, and that fits the flow of the fixture nicely. Atalanta have been conceding in recent games, Genoa have been poor enough away from home to make mistakes, and the head-to-head record leans toward goals with both teams scoring in four of the last five meetings listed. If you want a slightly safer route, Atalanta to win and Both Teams To Score is the logical alternative, but the straight BTTS play is the cleanest angle here.
League and venue; tap a row for the match page.
League
Range
Venue
No matches for these filters.
No matches for these filters.
Percentages from finished games after filters (1X2, goals, BTTS).
League
Range
Venue