Who goes up: Boris Radunovic

He risks going under already in the second round of the hands on the close touch of the ex Tramoni. He gets there, but the ball stays there, within reach of Pisa, and if it hadn't been for the (provisional) intervention of teammate Di Pardo, the game would have taken a bad turn right away. However, the handsome Serbian goalkeeper proves to be on point, the thriller evening in Ascoli seems like a lifetime ago. Lucid, reactive, he manages ordinary administration flawlessly at first apathetic and therefore unpredictable. Like Altare's mistake at the start of recovery, on which he can do little or nothing. Instead, he does a lot, a lot, five minutes from the ninetieth minute, on Touré's lash. Spectacular save and - needless to say - decisive. In fact, it's better not to think about the effects that a Tuscan goal would have had at that moment.

Who gets off: Giorgio Altare

More than a decline, it's a collapse. He had already shown clear signs of instability in previous matches, and the fact that he always played, perhaps, didn't allow him to work on his limits and manage himself from a physical point of view as well. Paradoxically, the ominous back pass with which he sent Morutan online is only the most sensational of a series of wrong interpretations, beyond the approach and level of attention he had at the time. Impetuous and decomposed throughout the race. Then it's true that he's a hammer on the front line, and when the pressure rises he gets excited. He intercepts almost all the balls, but most end up on the opponent's foot. And we are at the end of it. Maybe he should take a breather. And the change with Obert in the last half hour against Pisa could be a preview of Frosinone.

© Riproduzione riservata