The most instructive story of this Serie A week is not a single performance but a pattern: the players who separated themselves from the field did so through sustained influence across 90 minutes or more, not isolated moments. David de Gea posted a 9.20 rating — the highest of any player across any position this week — while Marcus Thuram and Nico Paz each reached 8.90. The week belonged to individuals operating at a level their teammates could not match.
Goalkeeper
David de Gea, the Fiorentina goalkeeper, produced the defining individual performance of the week. A rating of 9.20 across 90 minutes places him in territory that most keepers visit once or twice a season, if at all. What makes that number credible rather than inflated is context: a goalkeeper's rating rises when the team around him is under pressure, and de Gea's figure suggests he was asked to do more than distribute. He was the reason the scoreline read as it did. Marco Carnesecchi, the Atalanta goalkeeper, registered an 8.30 across 92 minutes — a strong performance in its own right, and a reminder that la Dea's defensive structure continues to demand quality from the man between the posts. Zion Suzuki, the Parma goalkeeper, completed 97 minutes with a 7.70 rating, the extra time alone indicating a match that stretched into tension.
Defence
Denzel Dumfries, the Inter defender, scored twice in 90 minutes and earned an 8.50 rating — the highest of any outfield player in his position this week. Two goals from a wing-back is not a tactical accident; it reflects a team structure that actively invites the full-back into finishing positions. Dumfries's output this week is the kind that shifts how opponents prepare for Inter. Oskar Solet, the Udinese defender, and Mario Hermoso, the Roma defender, both finished with 7.90 ratings. Hermoso added a goal across 92 minutes, which gives Roma's backline an offensive dimension that is worth monitoring as the season develops. Solet's 97 minutes at 7.90 suggests a composed, high-volume performance rather than a single decisive intervention.
Midfield
Nico Paz, the Como midfielder, appeared twice in this week's data — ratings of 8.90 and 8.20 across 90 and 95 minutes respectively, each with a goal. That is not a misprint. Paz played in two separate fixtures within the tracking window and contributed a goal in each. The aggregate picture is of a player operating with a consistency that his age and the modest expectations surrounding Como make genuinely significant. An 8.90 in one match would be notable; backing it with an 8.20 in the next, across 95 minutes, suggests he is not riding form so much as setting a standard. Riccardo Orsolini, the Bologna midfielder, recorded an 8.30 rating with a goal in 90 minutes. Orsolini has long been a player whose numbers outrun his reputation in broader conversation; this week was another entry in that ledger.
Attack
Marcus Thuram, the Inter forward, scored twice in 90 minutes and rated 8.90 — matching Paz for the week's joint-highest outfield rating. Paired with Dumfries's brace, Inter's attacking output this week came substantially from players whose primary function is not goalscoring, which tells you something about how the team is structured and how opponents are struggling to contain them. M'Bala Nzola, the Fiorentina forward, contributed a goal and an assist in just 76 minutes, rating 8.30. Efficiency per minute matters: Nzola's combined goal involvement across fewer than 80 minutes of action is the kind of return that earns him more time, not less. Gabriel Strefezza, the Como forward, provided an assist in 66 minutes and rated 8.00. Two Como players — Strefezza and Paz — appear in this week's top performers list, which is not a coincidence. It reflects a team playing with a coherence that their position in the division does not yet fully advertise.
Verdict
The week's clearest trend is positional fluidity in the scoring columns: a wing-back with two goals, a centre-back with one, a goalkeeper rated above every outfield player — Serie A's top performances this week came from players doing more than their nominal role demands.