Südtirol and Bari meet again on Friday evening in Bolzano for the decisive second leg of their Serie B relegation playoff, with survival on the line and no room left for caution. The first leg finished 0-0 at the San Nicola, so the tie is still wide open, but the balance of pressure is different now: Bari must win, while Südtirol can stay in Serie B with another draw.
That makes this the last league round for both sides in the clearest possible sense. Südtirol go into it with the better position on the table and the comfort of having already handled the first leg without conceding, while Bari arrive knowing that anything less than victory will send them into trouble. Fabrizio Castori and Moreno Longo both face a game that will be decided as much by nerves and discipline as by quality.
Südtirol Form & Analysis
Südtirol have not had a straightforward run into this playoff decider, and their recent league form is poor on paper. They are winless in 11 matches, and their last six have brought three draws and three defeats. The most encouraging result in that sequence was the 0-0 in Bari last week, where they held firm and actually finished with the more dangerous numbers, taking more shots and more attempts on target.
That first leg mattered beyond the scoreline. Südtirol looked organised, compact and comfortable enough without the ball, and Castori’s side now return home with the simple task of avoiding defeat. Their last win was a 4-0 away success at Reggiana on 3 March, so there is still a long gap to a victory, but this is not a team that needs to chase one here. A draw is enough, and that changes the shape of the contest.
The recent meeting also fits Südtirol’s wider pattern against Bari. They are unbeaten in six straight head-to-heads, including three goalless draws in the last four meetings. That does not guarantee anything on Friday, but it does suggest a matchup that has repeatedly been tight and awkward rather than open.
Castori has also been clear in his messaging, asking the side to “recover its identity” after the first leg and stressing that the draw was a good result. With the playoff on the line, Südtirol are likely to lean toward a controlled approach rather than a wild one, especially with the cushion of playing for two results.
Bari Form & Analysis
Bari’s recent form is better than Südtirol’s, but only just, and it still leaves them with plenty to prove. Their last six matches have produced two wins, one draw and three losses. The win at Catanzaro on 8 May showed that they can travel and score under pressure, but their home draw with Südtirol in the first leg was a letdown, especially after they created pressure without making it count.
The main issue for Moreno Longo is that his team now has to force the issue. Bari cannot manage the game in the same way Südtirol can. They need to find a goal, and that can open up spaces at the back if they are not careful. The first leg offered a clue to the problem: Bari had spells of pressure but finished with only eight shots and a lower xG than Südtirol, who were the sharper side for stretches.
There are also squad concerns. Giuseppe Sibilli is suspended, Ebrima Darboe is out injured, and Andrea Cistana remains a serious doubt. Matthias Verreth is also listed as doubtful. Longo has even been weighing a switch to a back four if Cistana is unavailable, which underlines the uncertainty in defence ahead of a match where Bari cannot afford errors. They must push, but they also have to stay balanced enough not to be caught by the first real Südtirol break.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been remarkably restrained in recent seasons. Five of the last six meetings have finished under 2.5 goals, and Bari have not beaten Südtirol since June 2023. The sequence also includes three draws in the last four games, so there is a strong case for another low-scoring contest being decided by one moment, if it is decided at all.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score is priced at 10/11, and that looks the best fit for the way this tie is set up. Südtirol’s xG in the first leg was slightly higher, Bari have to attack at home in Bolzano, and one goal from either side could change the whole rhythm of the game. The most likely scoreline is 1-1, which would send Südtirol through and reflect how close the first leg already was.