Juventus are poised to clinch the Serie A title tomorrow in a match against struggling Palermo which brings together the two extremes of Italian soccer.

With their own stadium, recent stability and restrained transfer policy, forward-looking Juventus are the club who have best adapted to the harsh new financial realities of Serie A.

Lowly Palermo, on the other hand, have been mired in chaos, firing and hiring coaches at embarrassing speed on the whim of their eccentric president Maurizio Zamparini.

Juventus, 11 points clear of second-placed Napoli, need only a point tomorrow to retain the title and, even in the unlikely event of a Palermo win, they would still seal it that day if Napoli fail to beat injury-plagued Inter in the late game.

If they do not wrap it up this weekend, they will still have three more chances to secure it.

Antonio Conte’s side have not quite matched the consistency of last season, when they completed the championship without losing a game, but with 25 wins and only four defeats in 34 outings, they are quite clearly a cut above the rest.

Juventus, who have won their last seven league matches, have managed to keep the core of last season’s side intact while 20-year-old midfielder Paul Pogba has been an impressive addition to the team since he was signed from Manchester United.

As last season, their new, compact and raucous stadium, nearly always full, is a stark contrast to the wind-swept rows of empty seats in some of Serie A’s over-sized and run-down publicly owned arenas.

Napoli’s challenge effectively ended at the start of March when they could only manage a 1-1 draw at home to Juventus during a rare dry spell for forward Edinson Cavani, the league’s leading scorer with 23 goals.

“We’ve had a great season, with only a few bad games, but Juventus have done better,” Napoli forward Marek Hamsik said.

“To make that jump in quality, we have to avoid messing up games the way we did against Sampdoria, Torino and Bologna.”

Relegation-threatened Palermo have had an extraordinary season, yet, more by luck than judgment, seem to have stumbled on a formula that could yet earn them a reprieve under a coach they originally fired after three games of the season.

Giuseppe Sannino was dismis-sed by Zamparini in September and replaced by Gian Piero Gas-perini, who lasted until early February when he was also sacked. That was the start of an extraordinary sequence of hiring and firing.

Alberto Malesani was handed the reins but was fired after three matches, then Gasperini was brought back and sacked after two games before Sannino was given another chance.

Incredibly, Sannino’s return proved a success and Palermo are unbeaten in their last five games, enabling them to creep out of the relegation zone thanks to their head-to-head record against Genoa who are level with them on points.

Napoli look almost certain to take second place and Serie A’s only other direct place in the Champions League group stage, needing six more points to make mathematically certain.

The real battle is for third place and the Champions League play-off round spot.

Milan, at home to Torino tomorrow, are in third with 62 points but are only one point ahead of a resurgent Fiorentina, who host Roma in one of the two games this evening.

Fixtures

Serie A

Playing today
Chievo vs Cagliari - 18.00
Fiorentina vs Roma - 20.45
TOMORROW – 15.00
Catania vs Siena
Genoa vs Pescara
Juventus vs Palermo
Lazio vs Bologna
Milan vs Torino
Napoli vs Inter - 20.45
Parma vs Atalanta
Udinese vs Sampdoria - 12.30

Standings: Juve 80; Napoli 69; Milan 62; Fiorentina 61; Roma 55; Udinese 54; Inter 53; Lazio 52; Catania 48; Cagliari 42; Bologna, Parma 40; Atalanta, Chievo 39; Sampdoria 38; Torino 36; Palermo, Genoa 32; Siena 30; Pescara 22.

Serie B

Played yesterday
Verona vs Pro Vercelli - 3-1

Today – 15.00
Brescia vs Ascoli
Cesena vs Juve Stabia
Cittadella vs Reggina
Crotone vs Modena
Grosseto vs Varese
Novara vs Bari
Spezia vs Lanciano
Ternana vs Livorno
Vicenza vs Empoli

Monday
Sassuolo vs Padova - 20.45

Standings: Sassuolo 80; Verona 78; Livorno 76; Empoli 66; Novara 60; Varese 58; Brescia 56; Modena 54; Padova 51; Juve Stabia 49; Ternana, Spezia, Crotone 48; Bari, Cittadella 47; Cesena 46; Lanciano 45; Reggina 42; Ascoli 40; Vicenza 38; Pro Vercelli 32; Grosseto 24.

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