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Empoli return to Serie B action on Friday afternoon with US Avellino 1912 heading to the Stadio Carlo Castellani, and both sides still have plenty to play for in the closing stretch of the season. Empoli sit 16th on 37 points, which is no sort of cushion at this stage, while Avellino are up in eighth on 46 and still clinging to the play-off race. There’s a sharp edge to this one. One side wants breathing room; the other wants to keep the pressure on the pack above.
Fabio Caserta’s Empoli have been stuck in an awkward zone for weeks: too good to feel doomed, too unreliable to look safe. Davide Ballardini’s Avellino, by contrast, have been a much harder side to pin down. They’ve dropped points in clusters, then turned up with a result that reopens the conversation. That’s why this match matters. It isn’t just about the table; it’s about momentum, and both clubs need some.
Empoli’s recent run has been frustrating in the way that really gets under a club’s skin. They were beaten 2-0 away at Venezia on 25 April, a game that looked fairly even on paper until the numbers told the real story. Empoli created little, Venezia created more, and the hosts finished stronger. Before that came a 1-1 draw at home to Virtus Entella, which felt like two points dropped after Empoli had worked so hard to get back into the game. Go back a little further and you find a 1-0 defeat at Padova, another 1-0 loss away to Sampdoria, and a lively 4-2 home win over Pescara that now looks like the outlier in a run dominated by narrow setbacks and flat attacking displays.
That’s the shape of them right now. Four matches without a win. Three defeats in that spell. Not pretty. Empoli’s home record is the one thing keeping them from looking far more vulnerable: four wins, 11 draws and just three defeats at the Castellani, with 27 goals scored and 21 conceded. They’re hard to beat there, even if too many of those draws have felt like half-promises rather than proper progress. You can see the pattern. They’ll compete, they’ll stay in games, but they don’t always land the punch that settles them.
The defensive side is the main concern. Empoli have gone 14 league games without a clean sheet, which is a long, nagging problem for a team hovering where they are. Even when they’re organised, they’re rarely watertight. At the same time, they’ve been first to concede in six of their last seven, and that’s a bad habit because it forces them to chase matches from awkward positions. They’re not a side built to dominate from behind. The flip side? They do usually create enough at home to get on the board. With 27 goals in home fixtures and a recent 4-2 win over Pescara still fresh in the memory, you wouldn’t write them off for a goal here. But a clean sheet? That’s a different matter entirely.
Avellino arrive in better spirits after a much-needed 2-0 home win over Bari on 24 April. It was a proper performance, too. They were sharp, aggressive and dangerous, racking up 2.81 xG and allowing Bari virtually nothing. Before that they had already beaten Mantova 2-0 away from home, so the last week has been a neat little reset after a patchier spell. There was a 1-1 draw with Catanzaro in between the wins, and before that a pair of away defeats at Palermo and Sampdoria. That told you a lot about where they still struggle. When the pressure rises away from home, they don’t always handle it well.
Still, Avellino’s overall picture is better than Empoli’s. They’re eighth in the table on 46 points and have at least given themselves a shot at the post-season. Their away record isn’t flashy — four wins, five draws and nine losses, with 17 scored and 29 conceded — but it’s not empty either. They’ve taken points in enough games on the road to believe they can unsettle an uncertain Empoli side. And they’ve been scoring away from home in bursts. When the away attack clicks, they can look sharp. When it doesn’t, they can drift. That’s the problem with this team. Consistency is still missing.
The recent away win at Mantova showed the more disciplined side of Avellino, while the 2-0 loss at Palermo and the 2-1 defeat at Sampdoria reminded everyone what happens when they’re not quite at the races. Ballardini’s men are at their best when they keep things compact and turn the game into a contest of moments. That approach fits a trip like this better than open football does. Can they keep it tight enough for long enough? That’s the question. Their record suggests they won’t dominate, but they’ve got enough about them to nick chances, and the fact they’ve been unbeaten in three league games overall before this weekend adds a bit of confidence to the trip.
These two have met fairly often in Serie B over the years, and the pattern is more balanced than the current table might suggest. The standout recent meeting came on 22 November 2025, when Empoli went to Avellino and won 3-0. That was a clear statement from Caserta’s side on the day. Still, there’s a longer history of tight games between them. The teams have drawn 1-1 in Empoli before, and several of the older fixtures were one-goal affairs either way. This isn’t a rivalry that regularly explodes into chaos.
One angle from the head-to-head is hard to ignore: three of the last four meetings have seen Avellino fail to keep a clean sheet against Empoli. That fits the broader feel here. Empoli generally find a way to get on the board in this fixture, even when results don’t always go their way. That matters when you’re looking at a BTTS play.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 10/11 for this one. It’s the cleanest angle on the game. Empoli are too leaky to trust at the back, with 14 matches without a clean sheet and a habit of conceding first, while Avellino have enough going forward to punish that sort of slack defending. Neither side looks capable of controlling the whole afternoon. That usually points one way.
The 1-1 scoreline fits the mood of the match and the numbers around it. Empoli’s home record says they can compete here, and Avellino’s away form says they’re not just coming to park the bus. You can also see why the market leans this way from the broader run of results: Empoli have been involved in several games with goals at both ends, and Avellino’s away set-up has been open enough to allow chances. If you wanted a slightly bolder angle, under 2.5 goals has some appeal too, but BTTS feels the better bet because both defences have enough flaws to be exposed.
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