

Match form loads a moment after the page opens so the main prediction can appear first; recent results are fetched right after.
Lecce host Juventus at the Via del Mare on Saturday evening, 9 May 2026, in a Serie A meeting that matters very differently for each club. For Lecce, this is all about survival. Eusebio Di Francesco’s side sit 17th with 32 points, four clear of the drop zone on paper, but not comfortably clear in practice. Every point counts now, and a home game against a heavyweight is the kind of fixture that can tilt a relegation battle one way or the other.
Juventus arrive with far loftier aims. Luciano Spalletti’s team are fourth with 65 points and still trying to hold their place in the Champions League positions. They’ve been hard to beat for a long stretch, and even though they were held by Hellas Verona last time out, they remain a side built on control, structure and a stubborn refusal to give much away. That matters in May. It usually does.
The recent meetings between these two have leaned heavily towards Juventus, too, although Lecce have occasionally made things awkward enough to keep the scoreline respectable. There’s a clear gap in quality, and on current form that gap feels real. Lecce need a perfect night. Juventus just need to be themselves.
Lecce’s season has been a slog, but the last few weeks at least have offered a bit of fight. Their most recent outing, the 2-1 win away at Pisa on 1 May, was exactly the kind of result a relegation-threatened side needs: stubborn enough to stay in the game, sharp enough to strike when it mattered. Lameck Banda put them ahead, Mehdi Léris added another, and Walid Cheddira had a hand in both goals. It wasn’t polished. It didn’t need to be. Before that, they’d drawn 0-0 away to Hellas Verona and 1-1 at home to Fiorentina, so there’s been a small but important shift in tone. They’ve stopped folding.
Still, the bigger picture is ugly. Before that steadier spell, Lecce lost 2-0 away to Bologna, went down 3-0 at home to Atalanta, and were beaten 1-0 at Roma. That run showed the ceiling as much as the floor. They don’t create enough, and when they fall behind, they rarely have the tools to chase a game properly. Even at the Via del Mare, where they’ve collected 17 points, the home record is only 4 wins, 5 draws and 8 defeats. They’ve scored just 12 goals there and conceded 23. That’s thin. Very thin.
The underlying numbers are just as unforgiving. Lecce have only 24 goals in 37 league games and a -23 goal difference overall. At home, they’re scraping rather than imposing themselves, and the xG profile from recent games doesn’t suggest a side suddenly ready to explode. Their win at Pisa came while being outshot 17-7 and beaten heavily on expected goals, 2.23 to 0.88. That’s a warning sign. Can they keep living like that against Juventus? Probably not.
Juventus’ last six have been more stable than spectacular, but that’s often enough for a team chasing the top four. They drew 1-1 at home to Hellas Verona on 3 May after a game they should really have won, given the numbers: 29 shots, 7 on target, 3 big chances, and an xG of 2.59. That’s not wasteful. That’s frustrating. Before that, they were held 0-0 at Milan, which was a much more guarded and valuable point. Go back a little further and the picture improves. They beat Bologna 2-0 at home, won 1-0 at Atalanta, then beat Genoa 2-0 before another draw with Sassuolo. Unbeaten in ten league games now. That’s serious.
The thing about Juventus under Spalletti is that they’ve been doing the simple things properly. They don’t have to run riot to control matches. They can squeeze opponents, manage tempo and wait for the moment to land. Away from home, they’ve taken 28 points from 17 games, with 8 wins, 4 draws and only 5 defeats. They’ve scored 23 and conceded 16 on the road, which tells you all you need to know: they travel well, and they don’t hand out chances for free. That’s a huge edge in a fixture like this.
The one caveat is that their away goals return isn’t explosive. Juventus have been efficient rather than devastating, and that fits the broader trend. Their last away trip to Milan finished 0-0, their win at Atalanta was 1-0, and even at home they’ve been leaning on compactness rather than chaos. The numbers point in the same direction. This isn’t a side chasing wild scorelines. It’s a side comfortable winning on margins. That’s why they’re so difficult to live with. Lecce may find the first half manageable. The full 90? Different story.
This fixture has been one-way traffic for a long time. Juventus haven’t lost any of the last 11 meetings with Lecce, and that streak has been built on control rather than drama. The most recent clash ended 1-1 in Turin on 3 January 2026, which at least showed Lecce can land a punch if Juventus aren’t at their sharpest. Before that, though, Juve won 2-1 at home in April 2025, drew 1-1 in Lecce in December 2024, and earlier beat them 3-0 away in January 2024 and 1-0 in Turin in September 2023.
The pattern is familiar. Juventus nearly always find a way to avoid defeat, and Lecce almost always concede. Lecce have gone 11 straight meetings without keeping a clean sheet against Juve, while Juventus have scored first in nine of the last ten in the matchup. That’s a nasty combination for the hosts. It’s hard to chase a game when the same old script keeps repeating itself.
We’re backing the Away Win at 4/9 here, and that’s the right call. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the Bet365 review covers the main Bet365 strengths and drawbacks before you decide whether it fits the kind of bets you place. Juventus are the stronger side, they’re unbeaten in ten league matches, and they’ve been far more reliable on the road than Lecce have been at home. The home side have just 12 goals in 17 league matches at the Via del Mare. That won’t scare Spalletti’s team. Not even close.
The expected shape of this one points to Juventus taking control before the interval, then managing the game in the second half. A 1-2 scoreline fits neatly with Lecce’s recent resilience and Juventus’ habit of grinding out results without needing to run up the score. If you want a safer angle, Juventus to win and under 3.5 goals looks sensible too. These aren’t the sort of visitors who need a shootout.
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