Serie A: Juventus End Win Drought, Francesco Totti Completes 300 Goals
Paul Pogba helped break the deadlock in the 37th minute when he got on the end of Roberto Pereyra's cross at the back post to fire a volley off the bar and into the net after the ball bounced off goalkeeper Eugenio Lamanna for an own-goal.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: September 21, 2015 07:47 am IST
Frenchman Paul Pogba created one goal and scored another as Juventus finally claimed their first Serie A win of the season, while Francesco Totti hit his 300th goal for Roma in a 2-2 draw with Sassuolo.
Amid their worst start to the season in several decades, Juventus travelled to Genoa hoping to build on an impressive 2-1 Champions League victory over Manchester City in midweek.
Pogba helped break the deadlock in the 37th minute when he got on the end of Roberto Pereyra's cross at the back post to fire a volley off the bar and into the net after the ball bounced off goalkeeper Eugenio Lamanna for an own-goal.
Juventus were given a boost when Armando Izzo saw red on the stroke of half-time after being cautioned for a second time when he pulled Juan Cuadrado to the ground.
But it took a penalty decision to see Juventus ease towards safety, Pogba stepping up to beat Lamanna on the hour after defender Giorgio Chiellini had been impeded by Diogo Figueiras.
Juve's first league win of the season came at the fourth attempt but the champions are still eight points adrift of early pacesetters Inter, who had Mauro Icardi's first-half winner -- the Argentinian's first goal of the season -- to thank for a patchy 1-0 win at Chievo.
Juve coach Massimiliano Allegri said as far as the league is concerned, his side are taking nothing for granted.
"It's been strange to see Juventus near the bottom of the table. We're on our way back, but we're taking it slowly," said Allegri, who was forced to replace Alvaro Morata with Pereyra after the Spanish striker suffered a first half injury.
Inter's 100% start means they will remain top for at least another week with a two-point cushion on Torino, who saw Juventus reject Fabio Quagliarella hit the net twice in a precious 2-0 home win over hapless Sampdoria.
"We played really well, especially in the first half," said Quagliarella, who played down suggestions he could be recalled to the Italian national team.
"Antonio Conte's squad is youth-based, so us oldies will have to keep piling the pressure on."
Fiorentina moved up to third, three points behind Inter, after Khouma Babacar bundled home the winner in a precious 1-0 win over promoted Carpi, who saw Marco Borriello come close to levelling on several occasions.
Roma sit fourth at a point further adrift after a frustrating display by Rudi Garcia's scudetto challengers only days after they battled to a commendable 1-1 Champions League home draw against defending champions Barcelona.
Sassuolo made a lightning start and Gregoire Defrel fulfilled early promise when he left Morgan De Sanctis rooted to the spot with a fine daisycutter from 25 metres out.
Roma soon levelled, although a suspicion of offside accompanied Totti's goal after he latched on to Miralem Pjanic's midfield pass to beat Andrea Consigli with a bobbling shot from the edge of the area.
It was far from spectacular, but the goal took Totti's tally to 300 in all competitions for the club for whom he made his debut in March 1993.
"Three hundred is an incredible tally," said Garcia. "We were waiting for it but we'd all have preferred to celebrate a win."
Roma spurned several other scoring opportunities and Sassuolo restored their lead on the stroke of half-time when Matteo Politano beat De Sanctis with an angled drive the 'keeper really should have saved.
Egyptian Mohamed Salah pulled Roma level with his maiden league goal for the club four minutes after the restart and saw a great chance to win the game plucked from thin air by Consigli in the final two minutes.
In Sunday's late game, Napoli made amends for their poor start with a 5-0 defeat of Lazio that came complete with a Gonzalo Higuain double.
Napoli had yet to win a league game but four days after routing Club Brugge 5-0 in the Europa League, Maurizio Sarri's men eased the pressure with a determined performance that saw Lazio succumb to the scoreline for the first time since losing to Udinese in September 1984.