Juventus holds lead as Buffon sets clean sheet record

Juventus holds lead as Buffon sets clean sheet record

March 07, 2016
Juventus' players celebrate at the end of their match against Atalanta in Italian Serie A at the Atleti Azzurri d'Italia Stadium in Bergamo, Italy, Sunday. — Reuters
Juventus' players celebrate at the end of their match against Atalanta in Italian Serie A at the Atleti Azzurri d'Italia Stadium in Bergamo, Italy, Sunday. — Reuters

ROME — Gianluigi Buffon set a new clean sheet record in Serie A's three-points-for-a-win era as Juventus maintained its three-point lead at the top of Serie A with a 2-0 win at Atalanta Sunday.

Andrea Barzagli's 24th minute tap-in and a wonderful individual goal from Mario Lemina four minutes from the end was enough for the reigning champion, which moved up to 64 points after extending its unbeaten run to 18 games, and hold second-placed Napoli at bay after Maurizio Sarri's side briefly drew level with Saturday's convincing 3-1 win over Chievo.

"In the last 18 games we've won 17 but there's still a long way to go, because second and third are in touching distance. Last year we had a 14 point advantage but this year it's only three," said an unsatisfied Allegri to Mediaset.

Juve equals its club record of nine matches without conceding a goal, and Buffon, who now hasn't conceded in 836 minutes and had very little to do against an Atalanta side that hasn't won since early December, is edging closer to the all-time Serie A record of 929 minutes established by AC Milan stopper Sebastiano Rossi in 1993-94.

The Juve captain is third in the all-time clean sheet list and against Sassuolo Friday can overtake Dino Zoff, who went 903 minutes without conceding for Juventus in 1972-73.

"We're not even thinking about his record. What matters is making sure that we finish a point ahead of everyone else," insisted Allegri.

AC Milan's slim hopes of qualifying for the Champions League took a huge blow after Alfred Duncan's first half piledriver and Nicola Sansone's close range finish with 18 minutes left condemned them to their first defeat in nine at Europa League-chasing Sassuolo, which had to play the last 13 minutes with 10 men when Gregiore Defrel was sent off for two silly fouls on Andrea Bertolacci and Juraj Kucka.

Sinisa Mihajlovic's side stays in sixth on 47 points and are now nine behind Roma, which took charge of the race for third by hammering Fiorentina 4-1 Friday night, and the Serb was livid with his side, who started well but wilted after Duncan's opener.

Milan will find themselves four behind fifth-placed local rival Inter Milan should the latter beat struggling Palermo in Sunday's late match.

Frosinone kept its Serie A survival chances alive with a comfortable 2-0 win over Udinese, thanks to a low 12th-minute drive from Daniel Ciofani and Leonardo Blanchard's bullet header just before the hour mark.

Roberto Stellone's side stay third-from-bottom in the drop zone but are now just a point behind Palermo and four away from Udinese, which has only won twice in 2016 and were overtaken by Genoa, thanks to a smart Luca Rigoni strike four minutes into their match with out-of-form Empoli.

Genoa moved level on 31 points with city rival Sampdoria, which eased its own relegation fears with a 3-0 hammering of rock-bottom Verona Saturday evening, while Carpi is six points from safety after its own goalless draw at Bologna.

Ciro Immobile missed a first half penalty as mid-table Torino drew 1-1 with Lazio in Sunday's early game.

Andrea Belotti had already opened the scoring for the home side with a 12th minute tap-in when Italy hopeful Immobile blasted over nine minutes later, and Lucas Biglia punished that miss with a spot-kick of his own in the 78th minute.


March 07, 2016
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