Genoa host Como at the Luigi Ferraris on Sunday afternoon in a Serie A meeting that carries far more weight for the visitors than the hosts, even if both sides have something to chase. Genoa are sitting 13th with 39 points, not exactly looking over their shoulder but not quite able to coast either, while Como’s excellent campaign has them up in fifth with 58 points and very much in the conversation for European qualification. That’s the bigger prize here. Como need to keep banking points if they want to turn a fine season into something properly memorable.
There’s a bit of edge to it as well. Genoa have not been easy to put away at home, and Daniele De Rossi’s side have enough recent life in them to make this awkward. But Como, under Cesc Fàbregas, arrive with a much sharper season behind them and an away record that’s become a real asset: 26 points from 16 trips, 23 goals scored, only 13 conceded. That travels. Their only concern is simple enough — they’ve gone four games without a win in all competitions, and the pressure to stop that wobble before it becomes a real slide is growing.
The last meeting between these clubs ended 1-1 at Como in September, and the meeting before that in Lombardy was a 1-0 home win for Como. Genoa haven’t beaten them in the last three league encounters. Still, this isn’t just about history. It’s about which side can impose itself on the day, and whether Genoa’s sturdy home numbers are enough to blunt a side with far more attacking ambition.
Genoa Form & Analysis
Genoa come into this one with a bit of momentum, which is more than they could say earlier this month. The 2-1 win away to Pisa on 19 April was their second straight victory, and it followed a home comeback against Sassuolo, a 2-1 result at the Ferraris that showed real grit. Before that, though, there was a harder spell: a 2-0 defeat at Juventus, a 2-0 home loss to Udinese, and a pair of clean, impressive wins over Verona away and Roma at home. That’s the story of their season in miniature. Capable, competitive, but not especially reliable.
The Pisa win was a decent snapshot of where Genoa are right now. They weren’t dominant, with 0.86 xG to Pisa’s 1.13 and only a slight edge in shots on target, but they found a way. That matters. The scoreline also followed a pattern that’s become familiar in their better spells: they’re tough enough to stay in games, and when the chance comes, they’ve got just enough to take it. The problem is that they’ve still conceded 46 league goals overall, which is too many for a side that wants to control matches rather than chase them.
At home, Genoa’s record is respectable rather than intimidating. Six wins, four draws and seven defeats from 17 league games at the Ferraris, with 21 scored and 22 conceded. That’s nearly even. Not disastrous, but not the sort of home figure that scares a top-five side either. Their clean-sheet issues are hard to ignore too — they’ve gone four matches without one in the league, and even when they win, they often leave the door open. That gives Como a route into the game. Genoa can make this messy. They haven’t shown they can make it safe.
Como Form & Analysis
Como’s season remains excellent on the whole, but the last fortnight has taken the shine off it. The 3-2 defeat away to Inter in the Coppa Italia on 21 April was no disgrace in itself, especially after they led and kept the game alive until late. But it was followed by a 2-1 league loss at Sassuolo, and before that came the mad 4-3 home defeat to Inter in Serie A. Even the draw at Udinese on 6 April, 0-0, hinted at a side that was working hard without quite getting the final punch right. Before that, though, Como ripped through Pisa 5-0 and beat Roma 2-1 at home. So the ceiling is high. They’ve just lost a bit of rhythm.
That’s the thing with Fàbregas’ team: the ambition is obvious, and so is the attacking quality. Fifty-seven league goals is a strong return, especially when paired with a defence that’s allowed only 28. Their away record is one of the best in the division too, with seven wins, five draws and only four defeats from 16 trips, plus 23 goals scored and 13 conceded. Those are promotion-style numbers, not the profile of a side hovering around the European places by accident. They’ve been smart away from home, too — compact when needed, dangerous when games open up.
Mind you, the current run is worth respecting. Como are without a win in four, and that’s the first proper wobble they’ve shown for a while. But they’ve also been scoring in the right games and creating enough chances to suggest the dry spell isn’t a structural problem. Even against Inter in the cup, they put up a fight. That won’t disappear overnight. Genoa are solid enough to ask questions, but Como are the better footballing side, the better away side, and the side with the stronger league incentive. They’ll fancy breaking this little winless run here.
Head-to-Head
These two have drawn a lot of recent blood from each other without either side landing a lasting blow. The last three Serie A meetings have produced two draws and a Como win, including the 1-1 in Como in September 2025 and the 1-0 home victory for Fàbregas’ side in April last year. Go a little further back and you find another 1-1 in Genoa in November 2024, plus a pair of lower-scoring meetings in Serie B. It’s been tight, almost stubbornly so.
The broader pattern is clear enough. Genoa haven’t managed a clean sheet in five straight meetings with Como, while four of the last five head-to-heads have seen both teams score. That said, these games haven’t exactly turned wild either — six of the last seven have stayed under 2.5 goals. So while there’s usually a goal at both ends, there’s also a ceiling on the chaos. Don’t expect a shootout.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 1/5 looks the strongest call here. Como are the better side across the season, the better travellers, and the team with the clearer objective. Genoa’s home record is decent, but it doesn’t come close to cancelling out Como’s away numbers or their overall league standing. Even with the current four-game winless run, Fàbregas’ side have enough quality to avoid defeat.
The xG projection nudges it toward a tight away edge, and that’s exactly how this feels. A 1-1 draw is the likeliest scoreline, with Como doing enough to keep Genoa at arm’s length but not quite turning control into a full three points. If you want a small alternative, under 2.5 goals also fits the shape of the fixture, but X2 is the safer, cleaner angle.