Saturday's Serie A fixture at the Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino is one of those matches that tells you everything about the state of both clubs right now. Torino, under Marco Baroni since the start of this season, sit 12th in the table and are doing enough to stay comfortable without doing anything to genuinely excite. Hellas Verona, managed by Paolo Zanetti, are in a considerably more desperate place. They are 19th, they have won just 3 of their 31 matches, and they are arriving in Turin with a five-game run that reads LLLWL. The mathematics of their situation are stark. But here is what nobody is asking: does Torino's home record actually justify the confidence the market is placing in them?
Let's establish the context clearly. Torino have 36 points from 31 matches, a record of 10 wins, 6 draws and 15 losses. Their goal difference stands at -18, which tells you this is a side that has been competitive in patches but has leaked goals throughout the campaign. They have scored 35 times and conceded 53. Hellas Verona's numbers are grimmer across the board: 18 points, 3 wins, 9 draws, 19 losses, a goal difference of -31. They have scored only 22 goals and shipped 53. Two sides conceding at similar rates, but separated by a wide gulf in terms of wins and, critically, their ability to grind out results.
| Torino โ Position | 12th, 36 pts |
| Hellas Verona โ Position | 19th, 18 pts |
| Torino โ Record | 10W-6D-15L |
| Hellas Verona โ Record | 3W-9D-19L |
| Torino โ Goals | 35 scored, 53 conceded |
| Hellas Verona โ Goals | 22 scored, 53 conceded |
And that brings us to the home picture specifically. At the Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino, Baroni's side have played 15 matches, winning 6, drawing 2 and losing 7. They have scored 19 and conceded 23 on their own turf. That is not a dominant home record. It is the record of a side that does marginally better at home than away, but still loses more often than it wins at its own ground. The crowd at a 27,958-capacity stadium should provide some advantage, but the numbers suggest the fortress narrative should be treated with care.
| Home Played | 15 |
| Home Record | 6W-2D-7L |
| Home Goals Scored | 19 |
| Home Goals Conceded | 23 |
| Current Form | WLWLW |
Hellas Verona's away record reads 2 wins, 5 draws and 9 losses from 16 away matches. They have scored just 10 goals on the road while conceding 29. That is an average of less than a goal scored and nearly 2 conceded per away outing. Their recent form of LLLWL makes this no easier to spin positively. The one result worth noting is that solitary win buried inside that run, which at least suggests they are capable of producing something on their day. But Zanetti's side are facing a must-win situation in terms of survival pressure, and that psychological weight tends to show on the pitch.
| Away Played | 16 |
| Away Record | 2W-5D-9L |
| Away Goals Scored | 10 |
| Away Goals Conceded | 29 |
| Current Form | LLLWL |
| Corners Per Game (Away) | 4 |
Both sides have conceded 53 goals this season. That number appearing for both teams is not a coincidence you can ignore. It tells you that neither defence has been remotely solid, and when two leaky defences meet, goals tend to follow. Torino's home matches have produced 42 goals across 15 games, which works out at 2.8 per game on average at the Olimpico Grande Torino. Verona's away matches have seen 39 goals in 16 games away from home. The thread running through this fixture is that clean sheets are rare currency for both clubs. The real question is not which side wins, but whether there is enough quality in front of goal to convert the chances that the defences will inevitably give away.
Torino hold superior recent form (WLWLW) and face a Hellas Verona side in freefall with just 3 wins from 31 matches. Verona's away record of 2W-5D-9L with only 10 goals scored on the road further undermines their chances here. Model probability of 66.7% represents substantial edge over the market's implied 22% at the Pinnacle price of 4.54.
But here is what nobody is asking: Torino have lost 7 of their 15 home matches this season. Nearly half their home games have ended in defeat. of a side that is genuinely inconsistent. Baroni's team is not a reliable banker at home. They alternate wins and losses in their recent form, which is the WLWLW sequence reading exactly as an alternating pattern. Against a desperate, relegation-threatened Verona side that may set up to frustrate and nick something on the counter, a Torino win is the right side to be on, but it is not a certainty. Manage your stake accordingly, and
| Fixture | Torino vs Hellas Verona |
| Competition | Serie A |
| Venue | Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino |
| Torino Manager | Marco Baroni |
| Hellas Verona Manager | Paolo Zanetti |
| Surface | Grass |
Torino vs Hellas Verona kicks off at 13.00 Saturday 11th April 2026.
Our AI model predicts Torino to win with 75% confidence. This is an AI-generated prediction for informational purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
The best available match result odds are: Torino to win at 2.02, Draw at 3.30, Hellas Verona to win at 4.80. Odds are subject to change. 18+ only.
Torino's last 5 home results: W (1W 0D 0L, 4 goals scored, 1 conceded).
Hellas Verona's last 5 away results: LW (1W 0D 1L, 2 goals scored, 2 conceded).
This match is being played at Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino, Torino. The stadium has a capacity of 27,958.