Roma return to the Stadio Olimpico on Monday evening with the league season entering its sharpest stretch, and this one matters plenty for both sides. Gian Piero Gasperini’s team are still chasing a finish high enough to secure their European ambitions, while Fiorentina arrive badly in need of points just to steady a campaign that has gone far below their usual standard. One side is looking up. The other is looking over its shoulder.
It’s the kind of Serie A meeting that can quietly decide a lot. Roma sit 6th with 61 points and a record that says they’ve done enough to stay in the conversation, but not enough to relax. Fiorentina are down in 15th with 37 points, a season of too many draws and too few convincing wins leaving Paolo Vanoli’s side in the awkward middle ground between safety and satisfaction. A win for Roma would strengthen their push for a strong finish. Fiorentina need something more immediate: a result that stops the drift.
The backdrop is fairly clear. Roma’s home form has been a major reason they’re still in the hunt, while Fiorentina’s away numbers have been patchy and often too soft. That combination usually points one way. Still, this league tends to punish any side that gets lazy for even 15 minutes. Roma can’t afford that.
Roma Form & Analysis
Roma’s recent run has been a decent one, and the shape of it tells a familiar story: competitive, sometimes a little uneven, but generally good enough to keep them moving. They went to Bologna on 25 April and came away with a 2-0 win, a clean, efficient away performance that featured early control and a second goal just before half-time. Before that they were held 1-1 at home by Atalanta, which wasn’t a disaster, and they had earlier put Pisa away 3-0 in Rome. The one blot in the sequence was the 5-2 defeat at Inter on 5 April, a heavy loss that exposed them when the game opened up. Since then, though, they’ve reacted properly. Three matches unbeaten after that Inter setback is the right sort of response.
There’s been plenty to like about Roma at home all season. Their league record at the Olimpico stands at 11 wins, 3 draws and only 3 defeats, with 27 goals scored and just 10 conceded. That defensive figure jumps off the page. They’ve turned their ground into a place where opponents don’t get much joy, and that matters here because Fiorentina haven’t been an especially reliable away side. Roma don’t need to dominate every phase to win matches. They just tend to control enough of them.
The recent performances also hint at a side finding balance at the right time. Against Bologna, they were clinical enough to finish the job and solid enough to keep their box protected, even if the shot count was fairly even. Against Atalanta, they absorbed pressure and still took something. Against Pisa, they were simply too strong. That’s the pattern Gasperini will want again. If Roma score first, they usually make life miserable. If they don’t, they still rarely panic at home. That’s a useful habit. Very useful.
Fiorentina Form & Analysis
Fiorentina’s form is harder to trust. Their last six have brought only one defeat, which sounds respectable on paper, but look closer and there’s plenty of frustration mixed in. They were held 0-0 at home by Sassuolo on 26 April despite producing plenty of attacking volume, and before that they drew 1-1 away to Lecce. Those are the sort of results that leave you with the feeling they’re doing enough to stay competitive but not enough to land a telling blow. The momentum just isn’t really there.
Their home and European results have been more lively. They beat Lazio 1-0 in Serie A on 13 April and took a 2-1 win over Crystal Palace at home in the Conference League knockouts, which at least showed some edge. But the away side has looked flatter. The 3-0 loss at Crystal Palace on 9 April was a rough night, and while the 1-0 win at Hellas Verona came earlier, it feels like a different era in the context of a season that has since drifted. Vanoli’s side have enough organisation to compete, but not enough punch away from home to be trusted fully.
The league table tells the same tale. Fiorentina’s away record is only 4 wins, 6 draws and 7 losses, with 18 goals scored and 25 conceded on the road. That’s not the profile of a side you’d rush to back in Rome. They’re capable of keeping games tight — and they’ve drawn a lot this season, full stop — but they often struggle to turn those periods into wins. Can they stay in touch here? Yes. Can they live with Roma for 90 minutes if they concede first? That’s the tougher question.
One thing Fiorentina do carry is a stubborn streak. They’ve gone four matches unbeaten since their last loss, and they’ve made a habit of hanging around in games rather than folding. Their recent 0-0 with Sassuolo, despite decent attacking numbers, underlined that they can create chances without always finishing them. That’s the problem in a nutshell. There’s effort. There’s some control. There’s not enough end product. At Roma, that can leave you empty-handed.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has delivered a few sharp edges in recent years. Roma won 2-1 at Fiorentina on 5 October 2025, and they also edged the reverse meeting 1-0 at home in May 2025. Before that, Fiorentina had enjoyed a brutal 5-1 win in Florence in October 2024, so there’s no complete one-way traffic here. Still, Roma have taken the last two league meetings, and that does matter when a match has a bit of weight behind it.
There’s also a clear trend worth keeping in mind: these games often produce goals at both ends. Five of the last six head-to-heads saw both teams score. The flip side? Fiorentina haven’t kept a clean sheet in seven straight meetings with Roma. That’s not a coincidence you ignore.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Roma to win at 8/13 here, and it’s the right side of the line. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the accumulator tips page pulls together accumulator tips if you want to turn similar reads into a stronger combo ticket. Their home record is strong, their defensive numbers at the Olimpico are excellent, and Fiorentina’s away record just isn’t convincing enough to suggest they can go to Rome and take the three points. The hosts have also won the last two league meetings. That counts.
The 2-1 scoreline looks fair. Roma have enough control and enough attacking quality to get ahead, but Fiorentina’s recent habit of staying in games means a clean sheet isn’t the most likely outcome. A 1-0 home win wouldn’t shock anyone, mind you, especially with Roma’s defensive profile at home. But 2-1 feels more alive. If you want a secondary angle, Roma to win and both teams to score is the one that fits the shape of this fixture, though the straight home win remains the cleaner play.