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Buy tickets for AS Roma vs Atalanta - Serie A Buy tickets for AS Roma vs Atalanta - Serie A

Serie A (33. round)
18. April 2026. 20:45h
AS Roma vs Atalanta
Stadio Olimpico, Rim, IT
2026
18
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for AS Roma - Atalanta in Serie A: travel guide to Stadio Olimpico in Rome and what is at stake

Looking for tickets for AS Roma - Atalanta at Stadio Olimpico? Here you can buy tickets and plan your Rome matchday: public transport routes toward Foro Italico, a quick tip on arriving early to avoid crowds, what is at stake in the Serie A table, and which scorers and creators could decide the night from the first minute

Roma - Atalanta: a clash where the table is felt in every duel

In Serie A Round 33, Atalanta arrive at the Stadio Olimpico, and Roma welcome this slot as the league’s sixth-placed side. After 32 played matches, Roma are on 57 points, while Atalanta are seventh with 53 — the gap is just small enough for Saturday night to swing the direction of both clubs in the season run-in.

The stakes are not only prestige, but a concrete chase for positions near the top: Roma are ahead, Atalanta behind, and there are six rounds left to play. In that kind of schedule, every two-win streak looks like a leap, and one bad weekend like a squandered opportunity.

Tickets for this match have been in demand among supporters because it is not a game you watch “in passing” — this is a night where, from the first minute, points, cards, and every recovery sprint are counted.

What is at stake for both teams

Roma come into the table with a clear calculation: they are currently sixth, but want to push toward the positions that carry the greatest competitive payoff next season. ESPN’s table after 32 rounds provides context: Roma are on an 18-3-11 record with a goal difference of 45:28, which is enough for 57 points.

Atalanta have a similar motive, but from a different angle: they must chase. With 53 points (14-11-7) and a 44:28 goal difference, they have an equally solid defense as Roma in terms of goals conceded, but four points fewer. In other words, Atalanta need a win more than a draw — especially when you play in Rome.

In the preview, Sports Mole highlights that the teams are separated by four points and that both are looking toward places near the top, noting that Atalanta, after a defeat to Juventus, must collect points away from home, where they have not been convincing this season.

Form and the numbers that best describe the moment

In the league this season, Roma at home have often looked like a “different team” compared to their away performances. Sports Mole states that the Olimpico has already brought 11 home wins in 16 league matches, and that is a figure you can feel in the stands — the crowd comes here with the belief that Roma can break a game open in a surge.

Atalanta come to Rome after a narrow 0-1 loss to Juventus, in a match where, according to Sports Mole, they were the better side but came away empty-handed. That kind of defeat can hurt twice: you show you can do it, and the result drags you backward.

Interestingly, the same source also recalls the head-to-head trend: Roma have won only one of their last 11 home league matches against Atalanta, and Atalanta also took a 1-0 win in this season’s “reverse” fixture. In practice, that means Roma cannot count on a psychological edge just because they are playing at the Olimpico.

Key figures on the pitch: who carries the most burden

Roma enter the match with a clear “number one” in finishing actions: Donyell Malen is Roma’s leading scorer in Serie A with 10 goals, according to ESPN statistics. Behind him are Matias Soule with 6 and several players on 3-4 goals, which suggests Roma often live off the concrete output of one winger/forward at the right moment.

Soule is also the team’s best assist provider with 5 assists per ESPN, so it is realistic to expect Atalanta’s preparation to revolve around how to “cut off” his drives into the middle and how to take away his time for the final pass.

For Atalanta, the numbers are distributed differently: Nikola Krstovic leads the scorers’ list with 9 goals, Scamacca is on 8, and behind them comes a group contributing 2-3 goals each. ESPN statistics also show that Charles De Ketelaere is the top assist provider with 5 assists, while Krstovic and Pasalic are on 4 — so Atalanta have more sources of the finishing touch and the final pass. Sports Mole further emphasizes the Malen - Krstovic duel through shots per 90 minutes, placing them among the league’s leaders by that criterion. That is useful information for a supporter: if you want to see “action” and shots, this match has two players who do not wait for the perfect moment — they shoot as soon as they sense space.

Coaches and style: Gasperini versus Palladino

Roma, with Gian Piero Gasperini, entered the season with the idea of intensity, verticality, and constant pressure. The club officially confirmed his appointment back in June 2025, which gives continuity to the whole story — this is a project built through a season, not a temporary solution.

Atalanta, in November 2025, officially presented Raffaele Palladino as the new head coach, with a contract until 30 June 2027. That matters for context: Atalanta changed direction mid-season and now, in Rome, play a match that tests how stable that new direction is under the pressure of the Olimpico stands. The expected picture on the pitch, according to the possible lineups from Sports Mole, suggests that both teams will seek width and transition: Roma in a setup with three center-backs and high wing-backs, Atalanta with their own “wide” players pushing along the touchline. That kind of match-up often breaks in the space between the center-back and the full-back/wing-back — that is where half-chances, cutbacks, and second-line shots are created.

Absences and the medical report: what is known and what is in question

Roma come into this week with a concrete problem in midfield: Sports Mole reports that Lorenzo Pellegrini will be out for at least three weeks. That aligns with reports of his injury, which for Roma means less creativity in tight zones and less quality on set pieces.

The same source also states that Gianluca Mancini could return to the squad, but that Gasperini is working with limited options because Manu Kone, Wesley, Paulo Dybala, Artem Dovbyk, and Evan Ferguson are also in the “treatment room.” For supporters, that is crucial: it is possible Roma must balance the need for a win with the need to have enough fit players at all for a rhythm every three to four days. Atalanta are, according to Sports Mole, in a better situation regarding absences: Scamacca returned to the bench against Juventus, and the unavailable list includes Isak Hien, Kamaldeen Sulemana, and reserve goalkeeper Francesco Rossi. Such a list often means the coach has more freedom in the match plan and less “patching” across positions.


  • Roma: Lorenzo Pellegrini (injury), along with several players who, according to Sports Mole, are in treatment (including Manu Kone, Wesley, Paulo Dybala, Artem Dovbyk, Evan Ferguson); the return of Gianluca Mancini is mentioned as possible.

  • Atalanta: Isak Hien and Kamaldeen Sulemana, plus reserve goalkeeper Francesco Rossi, are listed as unavailable, with Scamacca having returned to the squad.



How the match could be decided: three details to watch from the stands

First, watch the flanks: if both teams play with high-positioned wide players, every lost duel on the touchline can become a counter with a numerical advantage. In such moments, the Olimpico crowd usually smells an opportunity and lifts the team, so the tempo can accelerate in bursts of 5-10 minutes. Second, watch Soule and De Ketelaere: both are among the top creative solutions for their teams (Soule is Roma’s top assist provider, De Ketelaere Atalanta’s top assist provider per ESPN). Whoever manages to force that player to receive the ball with his back turned or too far from the danger zone has done half the job.

Third, do not underestimate set pieces: when teams are almost level in goals conceded (Roma 28, Atalanta 28), matches are often decided by one delivery, one rebound, or one second-line shot. That is why cards and fouls around the penalty area are a detail that is clearly visible from the stands.

Seats in the stands disappear quickly, and matches like this are remembered precisely for those “small” moments that decide the big table context.

Stadio Olimpico: what is useful to know before you arrive

Stadio Olimpico is part of the Foro Italico complex and one of the biggest stages of Italian sport. In its description of the reconstruction for the 1990 World Cup, Stadium Guide notes a capacity of around 74,000 seats after that work, with stands brought closer to the pitch and a roof — details that explain why the sound from the curves so quickly “drops” onto the grass.

For arrival by public transport, AS Roma in their official directions lists several realistic routes: for example, from the Termini side you can take Metro A to Ottaviano and then bus 32 to Piazzale della Farnesina, or Metro A to Flaminio and then tram 2 to Piazza Mancini. For a supporter coming for the first time, these are concrete points where you can most easily “catch the rhythm” of the city in Rome.

If you come by car, the same official guide mentions the G.R.A. and exit no. 5 (Flaminia), followed by further signs toward Foro Italico. Count on traffic around the bridges and approaches to Foro Italico thickening earlier, especially when it is an evening kick-off and there are other events in the city in parallel.

Rome as host: short and practical for away supporters

Stadio Olimpico is in the north of the city, by the Tiber and neighborhoods that on Saturday night can be busy even without football. If you plan to arrive earlier, the logic is simple: aim for Flaminio or Ottaviano as a public-transport “hub,” and leave the rest to the tram or bus toward Piazza Mancini and Piazzale della Farnesina.

For those who want a city day before the match: a 20:45 (local) kick-off means you have time for an early dinner and a calmer arrival, but do not leave everything for the last 30 minutes. In Rome, congestion does not appear suddenly — it “builds up,” and then you suddenly realize you are standing in a line that does not move.

Atmosphere: what you expect in the stands and how to prepare

The Olimpico is a stadium where you feel when Roma “catch a wave” — especially in matches where the table carries extra weight. Sports Mole emphasizes Roma’s home output this season, and that translates in the stands into high expectations: supporters demand aggression in the first 10 minutes and a reaction after every lost ball. Atalanta, on the other hand, do not come to Rome as a visitor defending “for a point.” A four-point deficit and the fact they already took a win in this season’s first meeting (1-0) give them a dose of confidence — and such visitors can make the atmosphere even more tense, because the crowd senses the opponent is not afraid.

It is worth securing tickets in time if you want to choose a sector and plan arrival without stress, especially because matches like this often fill up earlier than usual.

Matchday: useful habits that save nerves

The exact gate-opening time is usually published by the club ahead of the match in special notices for supporters, so the smartest move is to check the latest information on the official channels before you set off. Regardless, aim to be in the stadium zone at least 90 minutes before kick-off — because checks, ticket validation, and walking to your sector at big stadiums take more time than people expect. If you plan to use public transport, stick to the route AS Roma lists in their directions (Metro A to Flaminio and tram 2 to Piazza Mancini, or Metro A to Ottaviano and bus 32 to Piazzale della Farnesina). These are proven supporter routes and most often the fastest way when certain approaches around the stadium are closed or slowed.

Ticket sales for this match are ongoing, and in practice that also means more people at the approach points toward Foro Italico — the earlier you arrive in the zone, the more control you have over the evening.

Sources:
- ESPN (Italian Serie A Table 2025-26) - standings after 32 rounds, points and goal differences for Roma and Atalanta
- Sofascore - confirmation of time and venue (Roma - Atalanta, Round 33) and current positions (6th and 7th)
- Sports Mole - form, Roma’s home output, head-to-head trends, the season’s 1-0 result in the first meeting, plus absences and possible lineups
- ESPN (AS Roma Scoring Stats; Atalanta Scoring Stats) - leading scorers and assist providers (Malen, Soule; Krstovic, Scamacca, De Ketelaere)
- AS Roma (stadium travel/directions) - recommended public-transport routes and arrival by car (GRA, Flaminia exit)
- Stadium Guide - renovation context and capacity after redevelopment (around 74,000 seats)
- Atalanta (official announcement) - appointment of Raffaele Palladino as head coach
- AS Roma (official announcement) - appointment of Gian Piero Gasperini as head coach

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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