

Match form loads a moment after the page opens so the main prediction can appear first; recent results are fetched right after.
Cesena host Padova at the Stadio Dino Manuzzi on Friday evening, 8 May 2026, in a Serie B meeting that carries more weight for the home side in the race for a stronger finish. Cesena sit ninth with 46 points and are still trying to turn a solid season into something a touch more convincing, while Padova are 13th on 43 and need points of their own to keep any late push alive. There’s no promotion drama hanging over this one, but neither side can afford to drift. Mid-table can turn sour quickly.
Ashley Cole’s Cesena come into the game with a familiar problem: they’re hard to beat, but they’re not exactly cutting teams open. Roberto Breda’s Padova are in a similar lane, only with less attacking output and a slightly better habit of nicking tight wins at home. The recent numbers point towards a cagey contest, and the historical meetings aren’t screaming goals either. Can either side break out of that pattern? You’d lean towards no.
Cesena also have a decent chance to use home advantage, even if their record at the Manuzzi has been a bit flatter than their overall standing suggests. This is one of those nights where the table can mislead a little. Padova’s away return is respectable enough to keep things honest, but the combination of Cesena’s need for a response and Padova’s modest scoring record leaves the home win sitting in the strongest spot.
Cesena’s last six have been the sort of run that leaves you scratching your head. They opened with a 3-1 home win over Catanzaro on 21 March, a result that briefly hinted at momentum. Since then? A draw at home to Südtirol, two straight away defeats at Juve Stabia and Palermo, then back-to-back goalless draws against Sampdoria and Carrarese. That’s five without a win. Not ideal. The draw in Carrarese on 1 May was a strange one too — Cesena had only six shots, and just two hit the target, yet they still came away with a point. It was a survival job more than a performance.
There’s a pattern here. Cesena are not being battered every week, but they’re struggling to impose themselves and they’ve gone four league games without scoring. That’s a serious concern, even with Ashley Cole’s side sitting relatively comfortably in ninth. The home record is decent rather than dominant: six wins, six draws and six defeats, with 25 goals scored and 25 conceded. Balanced. Even flat. At their best they can control matches, but too many of their recent games have drifted into low-tempo, low-quality territory. The xG from the Carrarese game — 0.45 — and the shot profile tell the story. They didn’t create enough.
Mind you, the defensive side hasn’t collapsed. Two clean sheets in the last two matches show they can tighten up when needed, and the home record suggests they’re rarely blown away in front of their own fans. Still, if Cesena are to justify favouritism here, they’ll need a sharper final-third edge than they’ve shown over the past month. A 1-0 or 2-1 sort of night is more realistic than anything open and chaotic. They don’t look like a side about to explode for three or four.
Padova arrive with a similar kind of inconsistency, only with a slightly different flavour. Their most recent outing was a 1-0 home win over Pescara on 1 May, sealed late after a messy game in which Christian Pastina struck in stoppage time. Before that, they lost away at Virtus Entella, beat Reggiana and Empoli at home by the same 1-0 scoreline, and went down at Frosinone and at home to Palermo. That’s a side living on tight margins. When Padova win, it’s usually by the smallest possible gap. When they lose away from home, they often do so by the same sort of narrow scoreline.
The away record explains a lot. Padova have taken 18 points on the road, with five wins, three draws and ten defeats. That’s not disastrous, but the goals return is poor: just 14 scored and 24 conceded away from home. That’s the key number. Fourteen goals in 18 away matches simply won’t scare many defences, and it helps explain why so many of their matches finish with one side shutting the door. Their overall tally of 35 league goals is modest, and it leaves them vulnerable in games where they don’t score first.
There is some resilience in Breda’s team, though. They’ve already shown they can grind out results against sides around them, especially at home, and that 1-0 win over Pescara had the kind of late pressure and patience you’d expect from a side still trying to maximise every point available. The problem is that away from home they tend to get sucked into low-event matches without doing enough to take control. Against a Cesena side that’s also short on goals, Padova can keep this competitive. They probably won’t be the ones driving it.
The recent history between these two backs up the expectation of a tight game. When they met in Padova in December, it finished 1-1 in Serie B. Before that, Cesena beat them 3-1 in the Coppa Italia in August 2024, but you have to go further back to find the league pattern, and that record tends to be narrow and stubborn rather than one-sided. There’s a 0-0 in Serie C, a 2-0 Padova win, another 1-1, and a 1-0 either way from earlier seasons. No real blowouts. Just awkward, close contests.
The stronger trend is the one that matters most for this match: these meetings rarely run wild. Nine of the last ten have stayed under 2.5 goals. That’s a serious sample. You don’t ignore that kind of history when both sides are arriving with limited attacking rhythm and neither looks likely to turn Friday night into a shootout.
We’re backing Cesena to win at 8/13 here. If you want a few more angles around BTTS tips, our BTTS tips page pulls together BTTS tips with more both-teams-to-score angles across the schedule. It’s not a glamorous price, but it does fit the shape of the match. Cesena have the stronger home platform, Padova’s away scoring record is underwhelming, and both teams are living in the low-scoring bracket right now. The xG projection leans 1.4 to 0.9 in Cesena’s favour, which lines up neatly with a 2-1 home win. That feels about right.
There is a little tension in the pick because Cesena haven’t exactly been flying — five without a win is five without a win — but Padova don’t bring enough away threat to make the home edge feel fragile. If you want a safer route, under 2.5 goals is the natural alternative given the recent run of both teams and the head-to-head pattern. Still, the cleanest call is Cesena to edge it. One goal either way could decide it, and the home side look better placed to find it.
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