
Maurizio Sarri’s defensive machine faces Serie A’s newest survivors in a match where Lazio’s remarkable shutout streak meets Cremonese’s fading playoff form.
There’s something almost supernatural about Lazio’s current defensive form. Ten consecutive matches under 2.5 goals. Eight clean sheets—a league-leading tally. And last weekend, the most improbable victory imaginable: winning 1-0 at Parma despite being reduced to nine men.
Maurizio Sarri’s men have mastered the art of defensive pragmatism, and Cremonese arrive at Stadio Olimpico knowing full well what awaits them.
The nine-man miracle
What happened at Stadio Tardini last week defied logic. Captain Mattia Zaccagni and midfielder Toma Basic both saw red, yet the Biancocelesti dug in, absorbed pressure, and somehow found a winner through substitute Tijjani Noslin in the dying minutes.
That result encapsulates everything about this Lazio side. They may lack the attacking flair of seasons past, but their organization and collective spirit have transformed them into one of Serie A’s most resilient outfits. Eighth place doesn’t tell the full story—they’re only four points off the Champions League places with games in hand.
Provedel: the wall of Rome
Goalkeeper Ivan Provedel has been instrumental in this defensive transformation. His eight clean sheets represent his best start to a season since his stellar 2022-23 campaign under Sarri, when he recorded eleven shutouts at the same stage.
At home, the numbers are even more stark. Four clean sheets in their last five matches at Stadio Olimpico, and a six-match unbeaten run dating back to early October. The Eternal City has become a fortress.
Cremonese’s survival mission
The Grigiorossi find themselves in familiar territory. After yo-yoing between divisions in recent seasons, they secured promotion through the playoffs last year and currently sit in 11th place—a comfortable eight points above the relegation zone.
Yet form has deserted them at the wrong time. Four defeats in their last six matches include last week’s 1-0 loss to Torino, where star strikers Jamie Vardy and Federico Bonazzoli managed just three shots on target combined.
Vardy, recently voted November’s Serie A Player of the Month, carries the weight of expectation on 39-year-old shoulders. Bonazzoli leads the team with five goals, but creating chances against Sarri’s well-drilled defense will require more than individual brilliance.
Why history favors the hosts
Cremonese’s record in Rome makes grim reading. In 12 top-flight visits to Stadio Olimpico—against either Lazio or Roma—they have:
- Never kept a clean sheet
- Won just once (32 years ago)
- Lost 10 times
The last meeting between these sides in 2022-23 saw Lazio cruise to a 3-2 home victory and a 4-0 demolition away. The gulf in quality was evident then, and despite Cremonese’s improved organization this season, the bookmakers have them as significant underdogs.
Suspensions and absences
Midfielder Martin Payero is suspended for accumulating yellow cards, joining five other injury absentees including key defender Matteo Bianchetti. Manager Davide Nicola faces difficult selection choices with limited options.
Lazio welcome back Zaccagni from suspension, though they remain without the depth to rotate freely. The tight December schedule tests even the best-resourced squads.
The verdict
Every statistical indicator points toward a low-scoring affair. Lazio’s defensive discipline, Cremonese’s attacking struggles, and the historical trends all suggest another day for the defensive masterclass to take center stage.
The question isn’t whether Lazio will keep this tight—it’s whether Cremonese can find even one moment of quality to breach the blue wall of Rome.

Maurizio Sarri’s defensive machine faces Serie A’s newest survivors in a match where Lazio’s remarkable shutout streak meets Cremonese’s fading playoff form.
There’s something almost supernatural about Lazio’s current defensive form. Ten consecutive matches under 2.5 goals. Eight clean sheets—a league-leading tally. And last weekend, the most improbable victory imaginable: winning 1-0 at Parma despite being reduced to nine men.
Maurizio Sarri’s men have mastered the art of defensive pragmatism, and Cremonese arrive at Stadio Olimpico knowing full well what awaits them.
The nine-man miracle
What happened at Stadio Tardini last week defied logic. Captain Mattia Zaccagni and midfielder Toma Basic both saw red, yet the Biancocelesti dug in, absorbed pressure, and somehow found a winner through substitute Tijjani Noslin in the dying minutes.
That result encapsulates everything about this Lazio side. They may lack the attacking flair of seasons past, but their organization and collective spirit have transformed them into one of Serie A’s most resilient outfits. Eighth place doesn’t tell the full story—they’re only four points off the Champions League places with games in hand.
Provedel: the wall of Rome
Goalkeeper Ivan Provedel has been instrumental in this defensive transformation. His eight clean sheets represent his best start to a season since his stellar 2022-23 campaign under Sarri, when he recorded eleven shutouts at the same stage.
At home, the numbers are even more stark. Four clean sheets in their last five matches at Stadio Olimpico, and a six-match unbeaten run dating back to early October. The Eternal City has become a fortress.
Cremonese’s survival mission
The Grigiorossi find themselves in familiar territory. After yo-yoing between divisions in recent seasons, they secured promotion through the playoffs last year and currently sit in 11th place—a comfortable eight points above the relegation zone.
Yet form has deserted them at the wrong time. Four defeats in their last six matches include last week’s 1-0 loss to Torino, where star strikers Jamie Vardy and Federico Bonazzoli managed just three shots on target combined.
Vardy, recently voted November’s Serie A Player of the Month, carries the weight of expectation on 39-year-old shoulders. Bonazzoli leads the team with five goals, but creating chances against Sarri’s well-drilled defense will require more than individual brilliance.
Why history favors the hosts
Cremonese’s record in Rome makes grim reading. In 12 top-flight visits to Stadio Olimpico—against either Lazio or Roma—they have:
- Never kept a clean sheet
- Won just once (32 years ago)
- Lost 10 times
The last meeting between these sides in 2022-23 saw Lazio cruise to a 3-2 home victory and a 4-0 demolition away. The gulf in quality was evident then, and despite Cremonese’s improved organization this season, the bookmakers have them as significant underdogs.
Suspensions and absences
Midfielder Martin Payero is suspended for accumulating yellow cards, joining five other injury absentees including key defender Matteo Bianchetti. Manager Davide Nicola faces difficult selection choices with limited options.
Lazio welcome back Zaccagni from suspension, though they remain without the depth to rotate freely. The tight December schedule tests even the best-resourced squads.
The verdict
Every statistical indicator points toward a low-scoring affair. Lazio’s defensive discipline, Cremonese’s attacking struggles, and the historical trends all suggest another day for the defensive masterclass to take center stage.
The question isn’t whether Lazio will keep this tight—it’s whether Cremonese can find even one moment of quality to breach the blue wall of Rome.



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