Supersub Vlahovic takes home all three points for Juventus against Genoa

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Genoa vs Juventus

In the summer of 2022, the addition of Filip Kostic was expected to help take his countryman Dusan Vlahovic’s game to the next level. In four years with Eintracht Frankfort, he registered 53 assists between league and European play. He had 13 assists in 2021-22, including four as he helped lead Frankfurt to the Europa League title. Most thought that his crossing ability would turbocharge Vlahovic’s goalscoring numbers.

Fast forward to the summer of 2025, and no one had expected that the two Serbs would still be on Juventus’ roster come the second round of Serie A play. And yet, there they were, combining on a 73rd minute corner kick — yeah, a goal off a corner kick!! — to provide the difference in a 1-0 win over Genoa at the Stadio Luigi Ferraris.

With just over 12 hours left in the transfer window at the time of writing, it’s likely that both of the players will stay in a Juventus shirt, despite all expectations to the contrary since July. You can be your own judge as to whether or not that’s a good thing in the long run, but on a day when chances were few and far between — the kind of day where the Marassi likes to rear its head as the bogey ground it’s been for Juventus for most of the last two decades — the two were the ones who took all three points home.

Well, them, and the crossbar, which was the only thing between Genoa and a last-second equalizer. Fortunately, the Marassi wasn’t that kind of horror show this time around, and Juve left Liguria as one of only four Serie A teams to head into the international break with maximum points through the first two matchdays.

Igor Tudor had to do without Andrea Cambiaso, who served the first of his two-game suspension after his foolish red card for violent conduct against Parma. He was also missing Mattia Perin, Fabio Miretti, Juan Cabal, and (drumroll, please) Arkadiusz Milik. He was even lighter in the wing-back department with the departure of Nicolò Savona to Nottingham Forest, another young Juventus player treated more as a line on the balance sheet than the promising player he was. Given the shortage, Tudor had to get a little creative in the wide areas of his 3-4-2-1. Michele Di Gregorio started in goal, behind the back three of Federico Gatti, Bremer, and Lloyd Kelly. Pierre Kalulu reprised his role as the right wing-back, with Joao Mario replacing Cambiaso on the left. Manuel Locatelli and Khéphren Thuram took their usual places in midfield, while Francisco Conceição and Kenan Yildiz supported Jonathan David in attack.

Genoa was led into the fray by Tudor’s old Juventus teammate Patrick Vieira. Sebastian Otoa was on the treatment table, while Caleb Ekuban was just back to the bench. Former Juve prospect Nicola Leali started in goal behind a 4-2-3-1. Brooke Norton-Cuffy, Johan Vásquez, Leo Østigård, and Aarón Martín screened him in defense. Morten Frendrup and Patrizio Masini formed the double pivot in midfield. Mikael Ellertsson, Valentín Carboni, and Nicolae Stanciu supported Lorenzo Colombo in attack.

The early stages of the game were characterized by a whole lot of energy but not a lot of chances. Genoa pressed hard, and Juve couldn’t quite pass their way out of it to get themselves into a sustained attack. The only shot in the first 25 minutes came five minutes in from Joao Mario, who cut inside and let loose a shot that might’ve turned into a fantastic goal had it not slammed into Thuram’s face.

Genoa got their first shot in in the 26th minute, when Carboni won the ball and lofted the ball to Ellertsson, who turned Joao Mario around in the right channel but fired right at Di Gregorio, who was able to guide the ball away. But that didn’t really heat things up, either, and the game continued to stagger toward halftime.

Juve finally made a push in the last five minutes of the half. Yildiz found Conceição on the back post with an excellent corner kick only for the Portuguese to have his volley blocked, then Yildiz took on two defenders and rolled the ball to Gatti, whose first-time shot was somehow parried away by Leali with a one-handed dive. LEss than a minute later Yildiz drove a ball low to the far post that Leali again managed to get down to, this time parrying it right into the path of David, who somehow contrived to launch the ball over the bar from five yards out.

The second half nearly started in disaster when Ellertsson again got behind the defense with a long pass, but as he twisted to get a shooting lane past Bremer, Joao Mario recovered just in time to throw himself in front of the shot and block it behind.

Thuram and Kelly both fired wide within three minutes of each other, the latter, surprisingly, coming much closer. Shortly after Kalulu and Locatelli were forced to block shots in quick succession.

After an hour, Tudor decided to address a weakness that he had to have clocked by then. He withdrew David, who had been abused in the air by Østegård for the entire game, and sent on Vlahovic. He began to rectify the situation, and 10 minutes after coming on he made all the difference.

It came when Kostic, who had come on as part of the triple change that had also introduced Vlahovic, lined up to take a corner. With Ellertsson off the field after needing the brief attention of the trainers on the field, Vlahovic took advantage of the extra room and drifted into a huge swath of space in front of Østegård. Kostic’s delivery found him perfectly, and he ripped a free header across goal and past a despairing Leali.

Genoa immediately tried to surge forward into Juve’s half to respond. Noted Juve-killer Ruslan Malinovskyi had already come on in an earlier substitution, and Vieira immediately introduced Ekuban, Vitinha, and Jeff Ekhator to join him in bolstering the attack. But Juve’s defense held firm, and it wasn’t until the 89th minute that they finally managed a shot, a wild long-range effort from Malinovskyi.

Things stayed quiet until the last seconds of stoppage time, when Ekuban put an absurd amount of spin on a shot from the left channel to the far post. It looked like it was probably going wide, but Di Gregorio had to make sure with a diving parry behind. Genoa sent Leali up for what was sure the last kick of the game, and Martín sent in an excellent delivery that a poorly-marked Masini headed on target, only to see it slam off the top of the crossbar. Di Gregorio punched the rebound clear, and as Vitinha chased the ball for one last desperate attempt he fouled Nico González, ensuring Juve would squeeze themselves over the finish line with all three points.

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