
bet365

BetMGM

Betfred

BetUK

LiveScoreBet

10Bet

Virgin Bet
Can Fiorentina turn left-sided pressure into points against Cremonese at the Franchi? Read on for all our free predictions and betting tips.
To use the Live Streaming service you will need to be logged in and have a funded account or to have placed a bet in the last 24 hours. Geo location and live streaming rules apply.
▾
Both teams have 34 goals this season and poor defensive records. 9 of the last 10 H2Hs saw 3+ goals.
▾
These sides are separated by one point. Both average ~2 goals per game and struggle to keep clean sheets.
[bt4y_readers_tip]
Fiorentina vs Cremonese Predictions and Best Bets
Fiorentina vs Cremonese — bet365 Market Snapshot
Pricing shown below. Information only. Any probabilities shown are implied from the listed odds. Prices can change. 18+ GambleAware.
Fiorentina are listed as favourites at the Franchi despite their recent form struggle.
Pricing reflects a lean toward a lower-scoring tactical battle.
- Fiorentina’s league situation is brutally clear: 20th with nine points, five points from safety, and only one Serie A win across 17 matches, adding weight to every moment.
- Shot volume versus sharpness: Fiorentina average 13.3 shots per game in Serie A, while Cremonese average 8.5, hinting at home pressure against a more selective visitor.
- The main finishers are obvious: Rolando Mandragora leads Fiorentina’s Serie A scoring with five, while Federico Bonazzoli has five for Cremonese, setting up a goalscorer’s duel in a tense game state.
Attacking Intent: Shots per Match
A comparison of offensive activity levels between the two sides in Serie A.
The home side consistently generates shots but struggles with conversion efficiency.
A more selective approach that relies on clinical finishing in transition.
Control: Possession Percentage
Visualizing which side is likely to dictate the tempo of the game.
Expected to control the ball while building attacks down the left flank.
Comfortable playing without the ball and utilizing long balls into space.
Fiorentina don’t need reminding what a Sunday at the Franchi can feel like when the table turns ugly. They welcome Cremonese to Stadio Franchi with the pressure dial already cranked up, desperate to draw a line under a grim end to 2025 and start 2026 with something that looks like a lifeline.
The context is stark. Fiorentina were beaten by Parma last time out, and the result has left them five points shy of safety. Worse, they’ve still only got one Serie A win on the board. That is not a slump you laugh off with a shrug and a “we go again” caption. It’s the sort of run that makes every misplaced pass feel louder than it should.
Cremonese arrive in a very different place in the standings, sitting 12th with 21 points. They’re not exactly floating through matches on autopilot — their recent results include defeats to Napoli, Torino and Roma — but they do come with enough structure and enough threat to make this a serious examination of Fiorentina’s nerve.
It’s also a match-up with very recent history. They met four times across Serie A and Coppa Italia in 2022 and 2023, with Fiorentina unbeaten in those encounters. That doesn’t score goals on Sunday, but it does set a familiar backdrop: Fiorentina’s responsibility is to turn “familiar” into “functional” again, quickly.
Team News and Likely Set-Ups
Fiorentina’s possible starting XI points towards a back three with wing-backs and two forwards: De Gea; Pongracic, Comuzzo, Ranieri; Dodo, Mandragora, Fagioli, Ndour, Parisi; Gudmundsson, Kean.
It’s a shape that can be sturdy in theory and sharp in transition if the spacing is right. With three centre-backs, Fiorentina can protect central spaces and still release wing-backs high, and the midfield trio can give them angles in possession without losing the ability to counter-press.
Personnel-wise, the midfield carries a lot of the load. Mandragora has been Fiorentina’s top league scorer with five goals, which tells you he’s been arriving into dangerous areas rather than simply patrolling. Fagioli brings creation from deeper zones — he has two assists in the league — and Ndour adds another body who can help plug gaps when the ball turns over. Ahead of them, Gudmundsson and Kean reads like a pairing that can combine and also threaten separately: Gudmundsson has three goals and an assist; Kean has four goals and an assist, plus a high shot volume.
Cremonese’s possible starting XI also suggests a 3-5-2: Audero; Terracciano, Baschirotto, Bianchetti; Barbieri, Payero, Bondo, Vandeputte, Pezzella; Bonazzoli, (second striker not listed in the pasted XI).
Even with that missing forward name, the rest of the structure is clear. It’s a side set up to defend with numbers and attack with width, with wing-backs who can stretch the pitch and a midfield that can support direct play. Vandeputte’s four assists stand out as a supply line, while Bonazzoli is the main finisher with five goals in the league.
How the Match Could Be Played
The shapes suggest a game of mirrors: wing-backs versus wing-backs, back three versus back three, and a midfield battle that could decide whether this is controlled chess or frantic pinball.
Fiorentina’s listed style points include attempting crosses often, attempting through balls often, and attacking down the left. With Parisi as a likely left wing-back and Ranieri shifting across the left side of the back three, that’s the lane you’d expect them to use as a base camp. If Fiorentina want to settle, they can build up that side, push Parisi high, and try to create crossing angles or disguised passes inside for Kean and Gudmundsson.
The challenge is that Cremonese have their own wide theme: their style is listed as attacking down the right, playing with width, and using long balls. That points towards a very direct route to stress Fiorentina’s weaker areas. Fiorentina are listed as weak defending counter-attacks and weak defending against attacks down the wings. If Cremonese can lure Fiorentina’s wing-backs high and then go early into the channels, they can force uncomfortable sprint-backs and emergency defending.
This is where Fiorentina’s midfield decisions matter. If Mandragora and Fagioli (with Ndour alongside) keep their positions and stagger properly, Fiorentina can have a platform to recycle possession without leaving the back three exposed. But if too many players flood forward at once — especially given Fiorentina’s listed issues with protecting the lead and avoiding fouling in dangerous areas — the match can turn into something nervier than a team “five points shy of safety” really wants.
Cremonese’s own profile suggests they’re happy to keep things simple. They are listed as playing in their own half and using long balls, which fits with a plan of staying compact, winning territory, and asking Fiorentina to prove they can break a block without gifting transitions. That also links with one of Fiorentina’s weaknesses: stopping opponents from creating chances is listed as very weak, and defending against long shots is very weak. If Cremonese can camp in the mid-block and then pop out with runners and long-range attempts, they can test those fault lines without needing to dominate the ball.
There’s also a set-piece edge to this tie. Fiorentina are described as strong attacking set pieces and very strong at shooting from direct free kicks. That’s not just a footnote — it’s potentially a route to goal in a match where open-play confidence can wobble. At the same time, Fiorentina are also listed as weak defending set pieces and weak in aerial duels. So the dead-ball phases might feel like double jeopardy: a chance at one end, a fear at the other.
With the likely personnel, there’s an obvious duel on the flanks. Dodo and Parisi for Fiorentina, Barbieri and Pezzella for Cremonese. If Fiorentina can pin Cremonese’s wing-backs deep, they can force the visitors into longer clearances and stop them building those right-sided attacks. If Cremonese can push their wing-backs high, they can keep Fiorentina’s wing-backs honest and stop the home side committing fully to sustained pressure.
Free Bet Offers
Swipe to see more →
T&Cs Apply. Click to view.
T&Cs Apply. Click to view.
T&Cs Apply. Click to view.
T&Cs Apply. Click to view.
The Numbers That Support the Story
Fiorentina’s league line is grimly symmetrical: 17 goals scored and 28 conceded across 17 matches, with only one win in that run. That matters because it frames Sunday’s problem as more than one thing at once. They need goals, but they also need control. Conceding at that rate makes any match feel like it could tip away from you quickly, especially when “protecting the lead” is listed as very weak.
Yet Fiorentina do create volume. Their Serie A shots per game figure is 13.3, and across the broader match set listed they average 13.52 shots per game, with 68% of those attempts coming from inside the box. That suggests they’re not settling for hopeless punts — they are getting into areas where chances should be meaningful. The sting is in their profile label: finishing scoring chances is listed as weak. That combination is exactly how you end up with a team that can look busy without looking safe.
Cremonese’s numbers paint a different picture. They’ve scored 18 in 17 and conceded 20, with 8.5 shots per game in Serie A and 8.33 in the wider set. That is lower volume, but their characteristics list “finishing scoring chances” as strong. It suggests a side that might not pepper the goal for fun, but can be sharper with the chances they do craft. For Fiorentina, that’s a warning sign: you can’t afford sloppy turnovers when the other side doesn’t need ten chances to look dangerous.
Possession and passing numbers fit the likely flow. Fiorentina’s Serie A possession is listed at 52.5% with 83.3% pass accuracy; Cremonese are at 46.0% possession with 77.9% pass accuracy. That supports the idea of Fiorentina having more of the ball, with Cremonese leaning into directness and territory.
Individual numbers sharpen the tactical clues. Kean’s 4.4 shots per game stands out as a clear “volume shooter” in Fiorentina’s forward line, while Gudmundsson contributes both goals and an assist. Mandragora’s five goals from midfield suggests he’s been one of the few consistently arriving in the right places. For Cremonese, Bonazzoli’s five goals and one assist make him the most obvious focal point, while Vandeputte’s four assists marks him as the provider most likely to shape the final pass.
At the back, Audero’s 7.12 rating and three man-of-the-match awards suggest he’s been influential in keeping Cremonese competitive. That matters if Fiorentina do manage to build pressure and turn shot volume into sustained waves — they may need more than one good moment to break through.
Key “Moments” to Watch
First: the first spell after kick-off, when Fiorentina decide whether to play with patience or with urgency. With an “aggressive” tag in their style and a need to change the mood, the temptation is to come out fast. The smarter version of fast is controlled: moving Cremonese side-to-side, getting Parisi high on the left, and finding Kean early enough that he can shoot before the box fills up.
Second: transitions down Fiorentina’s left. Fiorentina’s “attacking down the left” preference can become a trap if Cremonese spring down their right, exactly where their own style says they like to attack. If Cremonese can release Barbieri and support it with a long ball into space, Fiorentina’s back three will be dragged into uncomfortable wide defending — an area the profile explicitly flags as a problem.
Third: set pieces and free kicks. Fiorentina’s strength from direct free kicks and attacking set pieces offers a genuine route to momentum and goals, especially if open play becomes tense. But at the other end, their weakness defending set pieces and aerial duels means they can’t switch off for a second ball or a recycled cross.
What could go wrong with this read? Fiorentina could have plenty of the ball, plenty of shots, and still find the match slipping away on the kind of moment that defines teams stuck at the bottom: an offside run at the wrong time, a cheap foul, a scramble they don’t clear, or a counter they don’t stop. Cremonese, for all their lower shot volume, have “finishing scoring chances” listed as a strength — and sometimes that’s all a team needs in a match where emotions are running hot and margins are thin.
Best Bet for Fiorentina vs Cremonese
[bt4y_article_veil]
Under 2.5 Goals
Fiorentina’s struggle to translate territorial dominance into tangible results has become the defining theme of their season. Despite averaging 13.3 shots per game in Serie A and maintaining a respectable 52.5% possession rate, their finishing remains a major hurdle. This lack of cutting edge is statistically significant, as they have scored just 17 goals in 17 matches. Their reliance on high volume without precision often leads to cagey, low-scoring affairs where they dominate the ball but fail to breach disciplined defensive blocks.
Cremonese arrive with a profile that perfectly complements a low-scoring prediction. Sitting 12th in the standings, they have managed their season with a balanced but conservative approach, scoring 18 goals and conceding 20. Their recent form highlights a significant offensive drought, as they have failed to find the back of the net in their last three matches, including a 0-0 draw with Lazio and a 1-0 loss to Torino. Their strategy typically involves playing in their own half and utilizing direct long balls, a tactic designed to minimize risk and keep the game compact.
Furthermore, the tactical matchup suggests a “game of mirrors,” with both sides likely to deploy three-man backlines. This structural choice often leads to a congested midfield, particularly if Fiorentina’s trio of Mandragora, Fagioli, and Ndour prioritizes stability to avoid the counter-attacks that have plagued them. With Cremonese’s main threats, such as Bonazzoli and Vardy, recently struggling for goals, and Fiorentina’s top shooters like Kean and Gudmundsson often failing to convert high shot volumes into goals, the ingredients for a high-scoring shootout are missing. Given the immense pressure on the home side to avoid another loss, a cautious, defensive approach is more probable than an expansive one.
What could go wrong?
The primary risk to this selection is Fiorentina’s defensive fragility, particularly their weakness in defending set pieces and long shots. They have conceded 28 goals this term and haven’t kept a clean sheet at home in their last 10 league games. If Cremonese capitalizes on an early dead-ball situation or if Fiorentina’s high shot volume finally results in an uncharacteristic clinical display, the game could open up unexpectedly.
Correct score lean
Fiorentina 1-1 Cremonese
A 1-1 draw reflects the current limitations of both teams. Fiorentina’s inability to keep a clean sheet—conceding at least once in their last 10 home matches—makes it likely that Cremonese will find a way through, even with their recent scoring drought. However, Fiorentina’s desperation and high shot volume at the Franchi should allow them to secure at least one goal, likely through a set-piece strength or individual effort from Kean. Since both teams are currently struggling for wins and lack a consistent “finishing touch,” a shared point via a low-scoring draw is the most logical outcome.
Selected Bookmakers Offers
New customers: Deposit £10+ in 7 days & bet on sports. Min odds apply. Reward = 4 x £10 Free Bets (2 x £10 Bet Builders & 2 x £10 Sports Bet). Valid 7 days. Free bets not valid on eSports and non-UK/IE horse racing. 18+. T&Cs apply. | |
Open Account Offer - New Customers only. Bet £10 and get £30 in Free Bets when you join bet365. Sign up, deposit between £5 and £10 to your account and bet365 will give you three times that value in Free Bets when you place qualifying bets to the same value settle. Free Bets are paid as Bet Credits. Min odds/bet and payment method exclusions apply. Returns exclude Bet Credits stake. T&Cs , time limits & exclusions apply. Registration Required. #Ad. 18+ Only, gambleaware.org | |
New cust only. Opt-in required. Deposit & place a bet within 7 days and settle a £10 minimum bet at odds of 4/5 (1.8) or greater to be credited with 3 x £10 Free Bets: 1 x £10 horse racing, 1 x £10 Free Bet Builder and 1 x £10 football. Free Bets cannot be used on e-sports and non-UK/IE horse racing. 7 day expiry. Stake not returned. 18+. T&Cs apply. Acca Club: Available to new & existing customers. 3 or more selections. Min Odds: 3/10 (1.3) per leg. Max stake: £500. Max Winnings: £200,000 per boost. Profit Boost amounts vary. Horse Racing, Greyhounds & Trotting excluded. Exclusions apply. Full T&C’s apply. 18+ GambleAware.org. | |
New customers only. Register, deposit with Debit Card, and place first bet £10+ at Evens (2.0)+ on Sports within 7 days to get 3 x £10 in Sports Free Bets & 2 x £10 in Acca Free Bets within 10 hours of settlement. 7-day expiry. Eligibility & payment exclusions apply. T&Cs Apply. | |
New members only. £10+ bet on sports (ex. Virtuals) 1.5 min odds, settled within 14 days. Free Bets: accept in 7 days, valid 7 days; £20 use on sportsbook, £10 on Bet Builder. Stake not returned. T&Cs.+ deposit exclusions apply #Ad. 18+Only, gambleaware.org | |
New bettors. Select bonus at signup or use code SPORT. Wager deposit & bonus 8x. Max qualifying bet = bonus. Valid 60 days. Odds, bet & payment limits apply. T&Cs Apply; 18+ | Please gamble responsibly #Ad. 18+Only, gambleaware.org | |
New customers only, 18+. Min deposit £10. Place a £50 bet on any sport at 2.0+ to qualify for £25 in free bets and 10 Free Spins. Free Bets and Spins valid 7 days. £0.10 Free Spins. T&Cs apply. Please bet responsibly. #Ad. 18+Only, gambleaware.org | |
New members only. £10 min deposit & bet on sportsbook (ex. virtuals), placed & settled at 1.5 min odds in 14 days of sign-up. Win part of E/W bets. Free Bets: accept in 7 days, valid 7 days, use on sportsbook only (ex. virtuals), stakes not returned. T&Cs Apply and deposit exclusions apply. Please gamble responsibly #Ad. 18+Only, gambleaware.org | |






