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Buy tickets for Juventus vs Bologna - Serie A Buy tickets for Juventus vs Bologna - Serie A

Serie A (33. round)
19. April 2026. 20:45h
Juventus vs Bologna
Allianz Stadium, Torino, IT
2026
19
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Juventus - Bologna in Serie A: match context and practical guide for visiting Allianz Stadium

Looking for tickets for Juventus - Bologna in Serie A? Here you can buy tickets and get the match context in minutes: recent form, key absences, and what is at stake in the standings. You will also find practical tips for reaching Allianz Stadium in Turin, plus timing advice for entry and the trip back after full time

Juventus and Bologna at the point in the season when every point changes the table picture

Juventus and Bologna play in Matchday 33 of Serie A (season 2025/2026) on Sunday evening at Allianz Stadium in Turin, at 20:45 local time (CEST). According to the current standings after 32 matches played, Juventus are 4th and Bologna 8th - the gap is big, but in the run-in every two- or three-game streak can shift a team straight into the scramble for European places or out of it.

Tickets for this fixture are in demand among fans, and that is easy to understand: Juventus at home at this stage of the league usually do not play “exhibition” matches, and Bologna arrive as an upper-half side that has shown throughout the season it can play against stronger teams as well. It is worth securing tickets in time.

What’s at stake in the standings

For Juventus, this is a match in which they defend their position in the Champions League zone: on ESPN’s table Juventus are 4th with 60 points (32 matches), behind Internazionale, Napoli and Milan. In a ranking like this, one slip opens the door to the competitors immediately behind, so home games against teams from the upper-middle bracket are treated as must-win “three points”.Bologna are 8th with 48 points and 32 matches played, which is a typical position on the line where a strong finish can push you toward places that lead into Europe, and a bad run drops you into the “safe zone” of mid-table. Additional context is the visitors’ rhythm: Bologna played the Europa League quarter-final in recent days and were knocked out after a tough second leg in Birmingham, which can affect freshness and rotation in Turin.

Form and streaks that you read between the lines

Juventus at Allianz Stadium in the last home league matches have a mixed picture of results - from a convincing win to draws and defeats, which suggests the match can go in two directions: either an early imposing of tempo and control, or a nervous night where one detail changes everything. As a fresher sample of home results, a run of five home matches is often cited (including one European fixture) that shows both low-scoring games and those with a more open exchange.

Bologna away, in the same “last five” window, show a good travel habit: several consecutive wins and matches in which they could defend deep, but also take space when the opponent opens up. Such a profile matters precisely against Juventus, because in Turin you often survive the first phase and then look for your moments through transitions or set pieces.

Key people and where the match can swing

For Juventus, it is important to follow the attacking options and the form of the wingers: Transfermarkt’s Serie A top scorers list for 2025/26 highlights Kenan Yıldız as one of the league’s best scorers (10 goals), which immediately tells you where part of the final balls go and how the opponent must defend the left side of the attack or the half-spaces he attacks from the second line.

Alongside Yıldız, there are profiles that provide verticality and intensity in midfield: the previews mention that Juventus count on Khéphren Thuram and Lloyd Kelly, and players like that often determine whether Juventus can play high and “squeeze” Bologna in the first 20-25 minutes.

On paper Bologna do not have one league “top gun” who runs away from everyone, but they have breadth: Riccardo Orsolini and Santiago Castro are, according to available statistical overviews, tied as Bologna’s best league scorers this season (7 each). This is a type of attack where the defence cannot focus everything on one player - Orsolini looks for a shot and a cut-in from the right side, Castro attacks the space between the centre-backs, and the rest of the line waits for rebounds and second balls.

Tactical expectations: Juventus’ pressure and Bologna’s transition

If Juventus start the way they usually try at Allianz Stadium, we will see a higher press and an attempt to get to a shot quickly through an early ball win. In that scenario, the key is how quickly Bologna can escape the pressure with the “first” or “second” ball - and how much space Juventus leave behind the full-backs when they go aggressive.

On the other hand, Bologna have fresh experience from a European match in which the opponent was extremely efficient in phases when Bologna dominate possession, but lack precision in the final third. That often changes the approach in the next league match: less “romance”, more concrete attacking into space and greater discipline without the ball, especially away to a team that punishes you for a mistake.

Absences and the medical bulletin that can change plans

At Juventus, in the days before the match, the talk is mostly about attacking absences. Multiple sources state that Arkadiusz Milik definitely misses Bologna due to a muscle injury, and in the previews Dusan Vlahovic is also mentioned as a player who is out. That directly affects whether Juventus will look for solutions through a false nine, wider wing play, or more arrivals from the second line.Bologna, according to injury lists, have a few important question marks, including goalkeeper Lukasz Skorupski (a muscle injury is mentioned) and several other players with a projected return in late April or early May. In practice, that means it is worth waiting for the official line-ups about an hour before kick-off, because a change in goal or in the back line often changes the way a team plays out under the press.


  • Juventus (mentioned absences in previews): Arkadiusz Milik (muscle injury), Dusan Vlahovic (adductor), with additional question marks that appear in daily reports

  • Bologna (mentioned absences in previews/lists): Lukasz Skorupski (muscle injury), Thijs Dallinga (muscle injury), Benja DomĂ­nguez (hip flexor problems), plus a few other players listed as doubtful



Allianz Stadium: what to know before you arrive

Allianz Stadium is Juventus’ home in Turin at Corso Gaetano Scirea 50, and the capacity is regularly listed in fact sheets as 41,507 seats. For a fan, that means two practical things: entrances and approach zones can fill up quickly, and the difference between “I’m arriving in the neighborhood” and “I’m sitting in my seat” is often bigger than it looks on the map.Ticket sales for this match are ongoing, and for kick-off times like this (Sunday evening) it often happens that part of the crowd shows up earlier and creates congestion around the stadium and fan zones. If you’re aiming for a more relaxed entry, plan to arrive earlier than you would for a daytime kick-off. Seats in the stands disappear quickly.

How to get to the stadium and what to plan on matchday

Juventus, on their stadium access pages, emphasize that from the main rail hubs Torino Porta Nuova and Torino Porta Susa you can get there by metro (line toward Fermi), getting off at the Bernini station, where on matchday a special connection/tram line 9/ is used that runs directly toward the stadium. It is also stated that after the match the last departure is about 45 minutes after the final whistle, which is useful if you plan to return without stress and without running through the crowd.

If you are coming by car, keep in mind that the area around the stadium is sensitive to the traffic wave in the last hour before kick-off. The smartest move is to decide in advance whether you will park farther away and do part of the journey by public transport, or arrive earlier and “lock in” parking before the rush. In both cases, for matches of this profile, the logistics decision often makes a bigger difference than the mere distance of your accommodation from the stadium.

Turin for away fans: brief, useful context

Turin is a city where everything can be done on foot and by public transport if you are staying closer to the center, but the stadium is not within a “postcard” radius like some older Italian arenas. So the plan is simple: morning or afternoon for the city, then a clearly mapped route to the metro and onward to the stadium. The biggest enemy is not mileage but the crowd at the wrong time.

What fans can expect in the stands

A fixture like this usually has two phases of atmosphere: first a loud “lift” in the opening 15-20 minutes, where the home side look for an early impulse, and then nervousness or confidence - depending on who creates the first serious chance. Bologna, as a team holding the upper half of the standings this season, will not come only to “survive”, and that usually produces a match with more intensity than when a lower-half side comes to Turin.

If you’re looking for an experience that is not just the result but also the rhythm of the match, watch the duels on the flanks: Juventus will try to open space through the wings and half-space runs, and Bologna will look for their chances when Juventus lose structure on the way back. In such matches, one intercepted pass or one wrong read by a centre-back often creates the whole story.

Small things worth keeping in mind before entry

Official line-ups come out late, but you can already prepare a “viewing plan”: if Juventus start without a classic number nine due to absences, pay attention to who arrives in the final phase of moves and who takes set pieces. If Bologna are without their first-choice goalkeeper, watch how they deal with clearances under pressure - that can be an invitation for an early home press.

For a travelling fan, the most important thing is time management: arrive at the stadium earlier, have a clear route back (especially if you are catching a train or a later flight), and a plan B if public transport fills up immediately after the end. It is worth securing tickets in time, but it is also worth securing logistics - because a 20:45 kick-off means everything ends late.

Sources:
- Sofascore - basic match data (time, venue), team positions in the standings
- ESPN - Serie A 2025/26 standings (positions and points after 32 rounds)
- Transfermarkt - Serie A top scorers list 2025/26; Bologna injury and suspension list
- Juventus.com - instructions on how to get to the stadium (metro to Bernini and connection/tram 9/, time of the last departure after the match)
- DestinationCalcio - Allianz Stadium fact sheet (capacity, address)
- Football Italia / Yahoo Sports - current news and previews (Bologna form and context, information on absences/injuries)

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1 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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