The last time Juventus stepped foot onto the field in Bergamo, it was not a very good night of football. As much as there was statistical domination from Luciano Spalletti’s squad, the end result of the Coppa Italia quarterfinal against Atalanta was a smash-and-grab only magnified by how bad things went once the Bianconeri fell behind.
Two months later, though, it was Juventus flipping the script.
The scoreline wasn’t mirrored. The overall evaluation of Juventus’ performance probably won’t be filed
under “good” or something close to it. But they did something that few have done against Atalanta in 2026 …
You know, actually beat them.
Taking a page — be it officially or unofficially — out of the book of the man which whom he will be coaching against in a couple of weeks at the San Siro, Spalletti played about as corto muso of a game as he’s coached since coming to Juventus on Saturday night. Outside of Jérémie Boga’s goal all of three minutes in the second half off some bad defending from Atalanta, Juventus didn’t record another shot on goal. But, for the subsequent 40-plus minutes, Juve’s defense that looked like Swiss cheese the last time they were in Bergamo made things stand, allowing Spalletti to wipe a little sweat off his brow after recording a 1-0 win over La Dea that allowed the Bianconeri to temporarily move up into fourth place ahead of Sunday’s Como-Inter Milan showdown.
It wasn’t pretty — especially in a first half where you were left wondering “How are Juventus not losing?” as they walked off the field at the New Balance Stadium and into the locker room. It wasn’t the kind of statistical domination in which we saw from Juve the last time they were in Bergamo.
But in classic smash-and-grab or corto muso kind of style, what lacked in style points didn’t actually impact the fact that Spalletti’s squad is heading back to Turin with three huge points in the bag. And they can now sit back on their respective couches back home and hopefully enjoy a Sunday of calcio that will determine whether they finish the weekend in fourth or fifth place.
But these days, the wins, three points, that’s what matters more than anything. (The same thing is true in October and November, too, of course, but especially now as they chase down Champions League qualification.) Juventus need as many points as humanly possible in these final two months of the 2025-26 season — and it doesn’t matter if it’s a comfortable win or what they did against Atalanta on Saturday night. Because three points are three points, jack.
That’s what they did in Bergamo — which was a far cry from their last visit to this same stadium.
To add to it, there’s this: Entering Saturday night, no team in Serie A had previously beaten Atalanta at home in the 2026 calendar year.
That’s hard to believe after the first half that Juventus put forward against Atalanta. They were not good. They struggled massively in the opening 20-25 minutes. They were struggling to deal with Atalanta’s press. They were struggling to string passing sequences together both because of said press or just because they weren’t all that good when they actually had the ball for more than a few seconds. The general feeling was that Juve just needed to get to halftime, Spalletti needed to get things settled down and reorganized a little (or a lot) a bit.
And, honestly, that’s what happened.
Spalletti didn’t make the changes right out of the half like so many wanted, but Juventus just looked so much more of a cohesive unit at the back compared to whatever the heck they were doing in the first half. That is what allowed Spalletti to go corto muso in the second half after Boga’s go-ahead goal. And maybe that’s the only way he thought his team could win. So, if that’s the case, then so be it — it’s three points in the bag.
Either way, Juventus got the win. They needed this win to kick off this huge three-game stretch that also sees Bologna and AC Milan over the next two weekends. Juventus just got three massive points against a team that had been just as good as Como during the 2026 portion of the schedule, so for that this feels even the bigger of a win.
Sometimes you just have to win ugly — and Juventus did exactly that in Bergamo.
RANDOM THOUGHTS AND OBSERVATIONS
- Pre-game thought No. 1: Ah, the nervousness that sets in the second you see the stadium lights at the
Gewiss StadiumStadio Atleti Azzurri d’ItaliaNew Balance Arena. Must be another trip to Bergamo! - Pre-game thought No. 2: I miss Weston McKennie already and this hasn’t even kicked off yet.
- Pre-game thought No. 3: Dark blue on light blue kit matchup? Who thought of this?
- Would I still be OK with Marco Carnesecchi becoming Juventus’ starting goalkeeper in the future? Yes. Am I glad he was a big part of that silliness at the back that led to Boga’s goal? Yes. Both things can be true!
- That being said, I was very happy to see that Michele Di Gregorio was able to follow up his very exciting substitute appearance against Genoa on Monday with a very good showing against Atalanta. You wouldn’t be wrong to say that he was one of Juve’s best players in Bergamo. A couple of those saves he made were big ones and he did a really good job commanding his penalty area. Just a really good sign that he could actually be past the struggles that landed him on the bench in the first place. Not going to oficially declare that to be the case just yet, but we’re trending in the right direction.
- I find it rather amusing that I sent a message in the BWRAO Slack channel about Arek Milik coming on for Boga about 45 seconds before he scored what proved to be the game-winning goal. You’re welcome, I guess.
- Spalletti confirmed after the game that both of his attacking wingers, Kenan Yildiz and Francisco Conceição, weren’t 100% fit but he decided to start them anyways to see how things went. Now it makes sense as to why both of them — but especially Yildiz — were rather quiet against Atalanta.
- By the way, that was only the second time this season Yildiz has started a game and been subbed off before the 60th minute. You could tell that he was not exactly happy when the camera cut to him on the bench and he was taking his jersey off, but I’m guessing it’s more that Yildiz was just pissed off about how he played rather than being ticked at Spalletti for the early hook.
- The forward who replaced Yildiz in the 58th minute, Jonathan David, he was exactly what Juventus needed as they were really settling into the corto muso approach. Some of his hold-up play and distribution of the ball was excellent. As much as Boga’s goal was what got Juve three points, David’s effort helped keep them in a winning position.
- It also helped that they defended so well as a team in the second half. It didn’t matter if it was Gleison Bremer or Lloyd Kelly or Federico Gatti after he came on, they all defended damn well.
- Notice how I didn’t throw Andrea Cambiaso in there? Yeah, because this was a roller coaster night for him — especially at the back. I feel pretty damn relived that this game ended without a major talking point being the latest big-time defensive mistake Cambiaso just made that led to a goal because you felt like it was imminent for a lot of that game. It was a doozy.
- Emil Holm was a rather surprising starter in my book, but some of the hustle plays he made in the second half really proved to be incredibly important. Just look at his effort as part of the sequence that led to Boga’s goal. See? Important.
- Manuel Locatelli put in absolute work on the defensive end — which is not a surprise. But even for him, some of the numbers he put up were quite impressive.
- Matching up against one of the best all-around midfielders in Serie A in Ederson, Locatelli had three tackles, four clearances, four blocked shots, six recoveries and a total of 12 defensive contributions. That’s stuff you usually see from Bremer. Instead, it was Locatelli. That’s a big effort in a corto muso-style win.
- Juventus just won at one of the hardest stadiums to win at with 45% possession, an xG of just 0.63 and half of their shots on goal total was one that might be a little questionable. Atalanta had nearly three times as many touches in the opponents’ box than Juventus did. It was a great defensive effort once they got the lead.
- I don’t know if Spalletti was banking on Atalanta running out of gas, running out of ideas or all of the above, but he sure did play things right out of halftime even though he probably had the vast majority of us scratching our heads with no subs out of the break based on what happened in the opening half. Then again, that’s why he’s just signed a contract extension with Juve and we’re here, I guess.
- Another DNP for Loïs Openda. His career at Juventus is toast.
- Giorgio Scalvini would look wonderful in bianconero and it’s a shame that Atalanta would want more than Juventus paid for Teun Koopmeiners to bring him to Turin whenever that would be possible.
- Speaking of Koopmeiners, did he anything of note after coming on for Khephren Thuram with 20 minutes to go? I’m not so sure.
- Speaking of Thuram, my guy’s finishing continues to be extremely hit and miss. Unfortunately, he missed a big, big chance in this game. Thankfully it didn’t come back to haunt his team.
- That’s because Juventus held on and got the three points. We’re drinking the good stuff tonight, my friends.











