Monaco and Juventus drew 0-0 at Stade-Louis II, a result that moved both clubs into the Champions League play-off round. Monaco ended the league phase in 21st place, while Juventus secured 13th. Monaco now wait for either Paris Saint-Germain or Newcastle United, with Juventus set to meet Club Brugge or Galatasaray.
The goalless contest featured few clear chances, but it still carried major stakes. Monaco were on the brink of elimination at half-time in the league phase calculations, yet the draw proved enough. Juventus also confirmed progress, joining Monaco in the group of teams advancing to the play-offs.
Defences controlled most of the action, and the numbers backed that up. Juventus finished with just 0.17 expected goals from five attempts
and did not register a single shot on target. That ended a sequence of 37 Champions League matches in which at least one Juventus effort tested the goalkeeper, stretching back to October 2020 against Barcelona.
Monaco were also not especially sharp in front of goal, but created more threat. The Ligue 1 side posted 0.5 expected goals from 11 shots. Monaco have now recorded three successive home clean sheets in major European competition for the first time since a similar three-game stretch between September and December 2014 in the Champions League group stage.
Lamine Camara played a central role in maintaining Monaco’s control without the ball. Camara had more touches than any other player, finishing with 96. Camara also contested 14 duels, made three interceptions, and drew the most fouls. Those contributions helped keep Juventus at distance and protected Monaco’s defensive record on the night.
The best opening of the match arrived inside the first minute. Mattia Perin misplaced a pass straight to Maghnes Akliouche in the penalty area, but the forward shot wide with the first-time attempt. Later, Folarin Balogun found the net in the 14th minute, yet the goal was ruled out for a foul on Pierre Kalulu in the build-up.
After that frantic start, chances were sparse. Vanderson forced Perin into two saves before half-time, both at manageable height for the goalkeeper. Juventus offered even less in attack. Lois Openda dragged an effort wide during one of the few forward moves from the visitors in the opening period.
The pattern did not change much after the interval, with both sides appearing content with the draw. Perin gathered weak efforts from Balogun and Caio Henrique, while Monaco’s defence continued to restrict Juventus. The tempo slowed, and neither team pushed with real numbers late on, as the point suited both.
𝗢𝗡 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗡𝗘𝗫𝗧 𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗡𝗗 pic.twitter.com/YhEE0dSr2LAS Monaco EN (@AS_Monaco_EN) January 28, 2026
The match strengthened Monaco’s reputation for strong home defence in Europe and underlined Juventus’ current attacking issues at Champions League level. With both clubs now focused on the play-offs, Monaco must prepare for a tie against either Paris Saint-Germain or Newcastle United, while Juventus will analyse upcoming opponents Club Brugge or Galatasaray.











