Lazio are currently on the longest unbeaten streak across the continent’s top 5 leagues and enter the top 10 of runs in the history of Serie A.

After finishing 2019 with both Coppa Italia and a Supercoppa Italiana in their trophy cabinet, Lazio haven’t looked back and are currently top of the League with one game in hand over Juventus and two games in hand over third-place Inter.

Lazio are currently on the longest unbeaten streak across the continent’s top 5 leagues and enter the top 10 of runs in the history of Serie A.

After finishing 2019 with both Coppa Italia and a Supercoppa Italiana in their trophy cabinet, Lazio haven’t looked back and are currently top of the League with one game in hand over Juventus and two games in hand over third-place Inter.

When Liverpool lost to Watford, Lazio entered the pole position and are frontrunners in the European game, where Bayern München and Hellas Verona are currently sharing second on nine.

But not only, they have also entered the list of the ten best passages in the history of Italian football, where Fabio Capello’s Milan from the early ‘90s still have the toughest one to beat.

Juventus tried a few years back, when Antonio Conte produced an unbeaten run of 49 games between May 2011 and November 2012, but he was still nine games behind Capello’s Rossoneri.

The stars at San Siro have a gap of 18 games down to Fiorentina at third place, as the Viola went over a year without losing any games from April ‘55 and June ’56.

Simone Inzaghi’s men are the fourth team from the new millennia who are part of the illustrious list, as Roberto Mancini helped Inter to a great run of form between May 2006 and April 2007.

Napoli also boast a great series of matches under Maurizio Sarri in 2017, when they pushed Juventus for the title until the end of the campaign – finishing only four points behind the champions.

Top 10 unbeaten runs in Serie A history:

1. Milan 58 (May 1991 to March 1993)

2. Juventus 49 (May 2011 to November 2012)

3. Fiorentina 40 (April 1955 to June 1956)

4. Perugia 38 (May 1978 to October 1979)

5. Inter 33 (May 2006 to April 2007)

6. Roma 30 (November 1980 to November 1981)

7. Torino 28 (March 1976 to February 1977)

8. Napoli 26 (March 2017 to December 2017)

9. Udinese 23 (December 1954 to September 1956)

10. Lazio 21 (September 2019 to February 2020)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *