Juve Stabia host Monza on Saturday evening, 16 May 2026, in a Serie B promotion play-off tie that carries all the usual late-season weight: one side trying to extend a run of momentum into a shot at promotion, the other chasing a result that would keep the path to Serie A alive. There’s no league-table safety net here. Win and the pressure turns into opportunity. Lose and the season suddenly feels very short.
For Juve Stabia, this is about proving that their awkward, stop-start spell can still produce something meaningful at the sharp end. Monza arrive with a little more pedigree and, on paper, the stronger attacking profile, but knockout football has a habit of flattening those differences. One goal can change everything. That’s the attraction. That’s the danger too.
The tie also comes with a recent meeting already in the bank. Monza beat Juve Stabia 2-1 on 15 February, while the game in Castellammare on 30 November finished 2-2. Those two meetings tell a fairly simple story: Monza have found ways to hurt this opponent, but Juve Stabia haven’t been overawed by them either. That matters when margins are this thin.
Juve Stabia Form & Analysis
Juve Stabia come into this one on the back of a morale-boosting 1-0 win away at Modena on 12 May, with Kevin Zeroli striking in the 86th minute to settle it. That was the sort of result that can steady a dressing room. Before that, though, they’d gone through a spell of matches where the points came in dribs and drabs: a 1-1 draw at Südtirol, a 1-0 home loss to Frosinone, a 1-1 draw at Pescara, another 1-1 at home to Catanzaro, and a 2-0 win over Cesena on 11 April. It’s been functional rather than fluent.
That’s the picture with Juve Stabia: awkward to beat, but not exactly free-scoring. Their last six have produced two wins, three draws and one defeat, and the recent pattern feels very much like a side living on fine margins. The Modena victory came despite only 0.33 xG, seven shots and just one effort on target. That’s not a blueprint you’d rely on twice. Still, they dug in, defended their box reasonably well, and nicked the decisive moment. In a play-off tie, that sort of resilience has value.
At home, the numbers are a little mixed. Juve Stabia have won two, drawn two and lost one of their last five on their own ground, scoring four and conceding four. That’s steady enough, not convincing enough. They’ve also been involved in a clear trend towards low-scoring games, with under 2.5 goals landing in each of their last six. You don’t need much more than that to understand the way they’re playing. Tight matches, narrow scorelines, very little room for error. That won’t frighten Monza, but it does mean Juve Stabia can keep themselves in the contest if they stay disciplined.
Monza Form & Analysis
Monza’s latest result was a messy 2-2 draw at home to Empoli on 8 May, and it was the sort of game that left the feeling they’d done enough to win without actually doing it. They started fast through Stiven Shpendi after just a minute, then went ahead again via Andrea Petagna before conceding twice, including a stoppage-time equaliser. They had 20 shots, eight on target and two big chances, so the threat was there. The finish wasn’t. That’s been the issue at times, not the supply.
Before that draw, though, Monza had put together a strong run. They beat Mantova 3-2 away, handled Modena 1-0 at home, went to Sampdoria and won 3-0, and beat Bari 2-0. That’s a proper surge. Four wins from five before Empoli showed what this side can do when they’re on the front foot. They’re direct, they get bodies into dangerous areas, and they can punish lapses quickly. The 3-0 win at Sampdoria especially stands out. That was no fluke.
Their away form is a little less tidy than the recent burst suggests, but it’s still strong enough to command respect. Monza have won two, drawn one and lost one of their last four away fixtures, scoring seven and conceding six. That sounds a bit wild, and it is. They don’t always control games cleanly on the road, but they’ve been effective enough to get results in hostile settings. With 1.4 xG projected here compared with Juve Stabia’s 0.9, the edge is clear enough. Monza should create the better openings. The question is whether they finish the job before this turns into a scrap.
Still, there’s a small caveat. That Empoli draw was a reminder that Monza can get pulled into loose, open games if they’re not careful. They’re not a side you’d describe as cautious, and that can leave space behind them. Against a Juve Stabia team that hasn’t been prolific but has been stubborn, one mistake could matter. Mind you, Monza have had more of the sharper attacking moments lately, and that often counts more than tidy control in knockout football.
Head-to-Head
Monza have had the edge in the recent meetings, and that February win will linger a bit longer than the November draw. On 15 February, they beat Juve Stabia 2-1 at home, which followed a 2-2 draw in Castellammare on 30 November. The pattern is straightforward enough. Monza have been the side more likely to find a way through, while Juve Stabia have shown enough resistance to suggest this won’t be a walkover.
That said, there’s no huge historical weight here. Two matches don’t build a dynasty. They do, though, confirm something useful for this tie: Monza have already found the right sort of attacking angles against Juve Stabia, and the home side haven’t quite solved them yet.
We Predict: Away Win
We’re backing Away Win at 10/11 here. Monza look the stronger side, and that slight market edge feels fair. Their recent run includes wins over Sampdoria, Bari and Modena, plus a decent attacking performance against Empoli even if the result didn’t land. Juve Stabia, by contrast, have spent most of the last month grinding out narrow games and relying on tight margins. In a promotion play-off tie, that can keep you alive. It doesn’t automatically make you the better bet.
The projected 1-2 scoreline fits the shape of the match. Juve Stabia should make this awkward, especially with their low-scoring trend at home, but Monza have more ways to hurt them and more punch in the final third. If you wanted a safer angle, under 2.5 goals is very live given Juve Stabia’s run of tight matches. Still, the cleaner play is the away side. Monza to edge it.