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Udinese host Torino at the Bluenergy Stadium on Saturday afternoon in Serie A, with both sides looking to finish the season on a respectable note rather than chase anything glamorous. Udinese sit 11th with 44 points, just ahead of Torino in 13th on 41, and the gap is narrow enough to give this a genuine mid-table edge without turning it into a desperate scrap. There’s no European prize on the line and no relegation panic either, but there is still pride, momentum and a useful shot at climbing the table.
For Udinese, this is about making home turf count and putting some distance between themselves and the pack behind them. Torino arrive with a similar brief, though their season has been a touch messier at the back. Roberto D’Aversa’s side have scored enough to stay in games, but they’ve also conceded far too much for a team that wants to finish comfortably. That tension sits right at the heart of this one. It feels like goals are in the air.
Udinese come into this on the back of a wild 3-3 draw away to Lazio on 27 April, a game that summed them up pretty neatly. They were open, brave and vulnerable all at once. Kingsley Ehizibue struck early, they kept responding when Lazio threatened to pull away, and Arthur Atta’s late double dragged them to a point that felt earned rather than gifted. Before that, though, there was a 1-0 home loss to Parma that stung, especially because it followed a superb 3-0 win at Milan which looked like a proper statement away from home. The problem has been consistency. One week they look sharp and aggressive, the next they’re flat. That won’t do much for the nerves.
The broader picture is fairly mixed. In their last six league matches, Udinese have managed two wins, two draws and two defeats, which is fine but hardly inspiring. The home side have been hard to pin down, and that’s been true at both ends of the pitch. They’ve found the net in bursts rather than as a habit, while the defence has been capable of conceding in clumps. The clean sheet against Como in a 0-0 draw on 6 April was followed by a narrow loss to Juventus at home and then that frustrating Parma defeat. So yes, there’s enough talent in the side to trouble opponents. But they rarely make it simple for themselves.
At home, Udinese’s record tells a similar story. Five wins, five draws and seven defeats is not disastrous, but it’s the sort of return that leaves you in the lower half of the table rather than pushing on. They’ve scored 16 and conceded 20 in those games, which is a modest home return and one that explains why they’ve struggled to turn spells of control into regular wins. The 41 goals scored overall and 46 conceded across the season also point to a team that can play football but doesn’t always balance the risk properly. You can get at them. Torino will know that.
Torino’s recent form has been a bit more live-wire than Udinese’s, and the 2-2 draw at home to Inter on 26 April showed exactly why they can be dangerous. They weren’t overawed, they didn’t fold when Inter scored twice, and they found a way back through Giovanni Simeone and Nikola Vlašić. That followed a flat but respectable 0-0 away draw with Cremonese, a 2-1 home win over Hellas Verona and a 1-0 victory at Pisa. Before that run, they had lost 3-2 to Milan, but even that was competitive. Torino are in the habit of staying alive in games. They don’t always dominate them. They do often hang around.
The goals are there, at least enough to keep them relevant. Torino have scored 39 in the league, which is not a headline total, but it’s better than their defensive return. The 56 goals conceded is the real red flag, and it’s the sort of number that makes any away trip feel fragile. Still, they’ve only lost once in their last four and they’ve drawn two straight before travelling here, so the mood isn’t bad. Mind you, the performances haven’t exactly been watertight either. They’ve needed moments, pens, and a bit of luck to get through matches. That can work for a while. It’s not a long-term plan.
Away from home, Torino’s numbers are blunt. Four wins, five draws and eight defeats is a poor enough return, and the 30 goals conceded on the road is the sort of stat that usually drags a side down the table. They’ve scored 16 away from home, so they’re not totally toothless, but they’re far more vulnerable on their travels than they are at home. Still, they’ve shown enough resilience lately to suggest they won’t simply roll over in Udine. Can they keep it tight for 90 minutes? That’s the question. Against a side like Udinese, who’ve been involved in open games and haven’t exactly been locking things down at home, Torino should get chances.
This fixture has leaned slightly towards low drama in the sense that neither side tends to blow the other away, but the recent meetings have had a bit of everything. Udinese beat Torino 2-1 in Turin on 7 January 2026, a useful reminder that the away side can certainly hurt the other when the game opens up. Before that, Torino took a 2-0 win in April 2025 and a 2-0 away win in March 2024, while the 2-2 draw in Udine in December 2024 was another tight one.
There’s a recurring feel to this matchup: neither side consistently controls it, and both can get on the scoresheet. That fits the broader pattern too. Torino have gone seven straight H2H meetings without a clean sheet against Udinese, and that matters here. It suggests the home side know how to find a way through this particular opponent.
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 4/5 for this one. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the guide to BTTS betting breaks down the BTTS market and shows when both-teams-to-score bets tend to hold up best. It’s the cleanest angle on the board. Udinese have just come through a 3-3 thriller at Lazio and a 3-0 win at Milan, so they’ve shown they can hurt teams away from home and still leave the door ajar at the back. Torino, meanwhile, have scored in enough of their recent games to be taken seriously in attack, and they arrive after putting two past Inter. That’s not the profile of a side likely to be blanked.
The scoreline call is 1-1, which fits the shape of the contest. Udinese’s home record isn’t strong enough to trust them for a straight win, while Torino’s away defending is shaky enough to expect them to concede. A draw with both teams scoring feels right. If you want a little more value, under 10.5 corners has a decent case too, given the teams’ recent trends and the way this matchup often stays fairly compact. But BTTS is the sharper play.
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