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Bologna welcome Roma to the Stadio Renato Dall’Ara on Saturday evening in Serie A, with both clubs still fighting for something meaningful in the closing weeks of the season. Bologna sit eighth on 48 points and are chasing the kind of finish that keeps European hopes alive, while Roma are sixth on 58 points and still have plenty to protect in the race for the higher continental places. There’s a gap in the table, but not enough of one to make this feel comfortable for either side.
This one also carries a bit of edge from the recent knockout tie between the clubs in the Europa League. Roma edged a wild 3-4 encounter at home on 19 March, after a 1-1 draw in Bologna a week earlier. That means the familiarity is there, and so is the tension. Bologna will want to show that their home ground still matters. Roma, under Gian Piero Gasperini, arrive with a stronger league position, yet they haven’t exactly been travelling like a side that’s impossible to live with.
The numbers point to a tight, fairly low-scoring contest, and that fits the mood here. Bologna’s home record is decent rather than dominant, Roma’s away record is similar, and both teams have recent results that suggest control is hard to maintain for 90 minutes. You’d expect a match decided by small margins. Probably a draw. Maybe not a classic.
Bologna’s last month has been a mixed bag, and the pattern is easy to spot. They beat Lecce 2-0 at home on 12 April and followed that with a 2-1 win away at Cremonese on 5 April, so there was a brief sense that Vincenzo Italiano’s side had steadied themselves. But that spark hasn’t carried far enough. A 0-2 defeat away to Juventus on 19 April was a reminder of the gap between respectable and ruthless, and the two Europa League meetings with Aston Villa were bruising as well — a 1-3 home loss before a 4-0 hammering in Birmingham. Go back further and the 0-2 home defeat to Lazio on 22 March keeps the broader picture a little bleak.
That’s the story of Bologna right now: capable of moments, but not reliable enough to string them together. They’ve won two of their last six in all competitions, yet both victories were followed by losses, and the defeats have often felt a bit too straightforward. Against Juventus, they didn’t register a single shot on target and finished with only 0.59 xG. That’s not enough, not by a long way. Still, the home league record is better than the overall feel might suggest. In Serie A at the Dall’Ara they’ve taken 20 points from 16 matches, with six wins, two draws and eight defeats, scoring 16 and conceding 18. Solid? Sort of. Convincing? Not really.
What stands out most is that Bologna don’t fold at home, but they rarely blow teams away either. Sixteen goals in 16 home league games tells its own story. The flipside is that they’re usually in the match, and that’s the key reason they can make life awkward for a stronger side like Roma. Their home games aren’t wild goal-fests; they tend to be close, scrappy and decided in narrow windows. That suits a double chance angle well enough. It’s not glamorous. It doesn’t need to be.
Roma come into this one in better league shape, but their recent form hasn’t been spotless. The 1-1 draw with Atalanta on 18 April was respectable, especially given the opposition, and it followed a comfortable 3-0 win over Pisa at home on 10 April. Yet that came after a heavy 2-5 defeat away to Inter on 5 April, a result that exposed how quickly Gasperini’s team can lose control when faced with real pace and quality. Before that, they’d edged Lecce 1-0, shared a chaotic 3-3 with Bologna in Europe, and lost 2-1 away to Como. There’s enough inconsistency there to stop anyone calling them dependable.
The most recent display against Atalanta was a decent response to the Inter thrashing. Roma were not overrun, and they actually landed 19 shots, nine of them on target, with 1.07 xG to Atalanta’s 0.69. That’s the sort of figure that suggests they can create enough to stay alive in a game, even when it isn’t fully flowing. But the old issue remains: away from home, they’re not clean or calm enough often enough. In Serie A on the road, Roma have 22 points from 16 matches, with seven wins, one draw and eight losses. They’ve scored 19 and conceded 19 away from home. Balanced, yes. Fearsome, no.
That away profile matters here. Roma don’t travel like a side that can simply turn up and impose itself. They’ve got the better overall league position and a stronger defensive record across the season — 29 goals conceded compared with Bologna’s 39 — but the road version of this team has been more open. Can they control Bologna for long spells in front of the Dall’Ara crowd? That’s the real question. Based on the recent evidence, probably not for long enough to feel safe. Still, they do carry enough attacking threat to nick a goal, and that keeps them in the conversation for a point.
Recent meetings between these sides have been lively. The most recent clash came in Europe on 19 March, when Roma won a ridiculous 3-4 away from home, after the first leg in Bologna had finished 1-1 on 12 March. Before that, Bologna beat Roma 1-0 in Serie A in August 2025, and the pair shared a 2-2 draw in Bologna in January 2025. Roma also won 2-3 away in November 2024, and Bologna had earlier beaten them 3-1 at the Stadio Olimpico in April 2024. There’s no shortage of goals when these two meet. None at all.
That said, the rivalry trend isn’t one-way. Bologna have often found a way to score against Roma, even when they haven’t won, and the most recent European ties only reinforced that. The bigger pattern is simple enough: these fixtures tend to be open, and they often go past the usual script. If you’re expecting a cagey, sterile contest, history doesn’t really support you.
Double Chance 1X at 8/15 looks the strongest play here. Bologna don’t need to be brilliant to avoid defeat, just organised and persistent at home, and that’s exactly where Roma have been vulnerable away from the capital. The away record is level on goals for and against, which tells you they haven’t been shutting games down cleanly on the road.
There’s also the recent head-to-head edge for Bologna at the Dall’Ara. They’ve scored in plenty of these meetings, and Roma’s last trip to Bologna in Europe ended 1-1. A 1-1 scoreline feels the cleanest read again, with Bologna doing enough to frustrate Gasperini’s side and Roma doing just enough to avoid leaving empty-handed. If you want a second look, both teams to score has obvious appeal too.
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