The latest Turin derby - a fixture first played in 1907 - pits together sides separated by only two points and two places in the Serie A standings, and Juve's current crisis opens an opportunity for Il Toro to overtake them.
Match preview
Always a sign of discontent at any Serie A club, Juventus players were consigned to a training retreat - or 'ritiro' - ahead of this week's derby, after the latest in a long line of failures saw the Old Lady humbled by Champions League minnows Maccabi Haifa.
The Israeli side impressed despite defeat in Turin just a week earlier, but had barely scored a goal or registered any points in most of their previous matches at Europe's elite level, and Juve's 2-0 defeat at Sammy Ofer Stadium heaped further scorn on beleaguered coach Max Allegri.
Juventus have now lost five of their last eight outings in all competitions and are perilously placed in Group H; trailing both Benfica and Paris Saint-Germain by five points in the table.
Back at home things are barely better for the fallen giants, as they sat eighth after the first nine rounds of the Serie A campaign - already 10 points adrift of relentless leaders Napoli. That represents the club's worst return at this stage for seven years, though back then they subsequently embarked on a 15-game winning streak - started by victory over Torino.
Given their sorry state now, the odds of the Bianconeri repeating such a feat are precipitous, and they make the short trip to Stadio Olimpico Grande having failed to win any of their last six away games in the Italian top flight.
They have, though, lost just one of their last 32 league encounters with their city rivals - coming out on top 23 times - and remain unbeaten against Il Toro since 2015.
Though they managed to pull off a 1-1 draw in the most recent Derby della Mole, Torino's last clean sheet against Juventus in Serie A was way back in 2008, and over the intervening period they have conceded 40 times in 22 meetings.
Previously beaten by a ruthless Napoli team sweeping all before them this season, Ivan Juric's current side were frustrated to see their run without a win prolonged to four league games last weekend, after they were held by struggling Empoli.
Indeed, trailing to Mattia Destro's acrobatic strike heading into the final minute of the 90, the Granata were indebted to Sasa Lukic for saving their skins and at least adding a point to their Serie A tally, which stands at 11 from nine matches - only two behind Juve.
However, Torino have now registered just two wins from their last 12 home fixtures and have even failed to score in five of their last eight.
As a result, they remain within the top half of the table by only a single point, and a promising start to the 2022-23 season is being undermined by a lack of penalty-area prowess, for all their admirable build-up play.
Set to face surprise package Udinese and champions Milan after tackling Citadella in the Coppa Italia next week, the pressure will be on Juric's men to seize victory against ailing opponents on Saturday, but overcoming the psychological hurdle that so clearly stands over the Derby di Torino may prove the toughest test of all.
Torino Serie A form:
L
W
L
L
L
D
Juventus Serie A form:
W
D
D
L
W
L
Juventus form (all competitions):
L
L
W
W
L
L
Team News
After Juventus welcomed back Angel Di Maria in midweek, following a Serie A suspension that kept him out of games against Bologna and Milan, the Argentina international was withdrawn in Haifa with a hamstring injury that now rules him out until November.
He will therefore be back in time for the World Cup, and so should long-term absentee Paul Pogba, but the French midfielder misses out again this week, alongside Federico Chiesa, who is close to returning from a cruciate ligament rupture suffered in January.
Mattia De Sciglio is also ruled out of the derby by a thigh problem, so Alex Sandro may continue at left-back, or Filip Kostic could be used as a wing-back if Max Allegri opts for a 3-5-2 formation.
Such a move would see Arkadiusz Milik brought back into the starting XI in partnership with Dusan Vlahovic, who has scored only one goal against Torino in eight previous matches.
Meanwhile, the hosts have a clean bill of health, so could even name an unchanged team from that which drew with Empoli last time out. Mergim Vojvoda's return to fitness, though, means wing-backs Ola Aina and Valentino Lazaro have competition on either flank.
Last year, Antonio Sanabria became the first Torino player to score a Serie A double against Juventus since 2000, but the Paraguayan striker has now failed to find the net on home soil for nearly nine months.
Torino possible starting lineup:
Milinkovic-Savic; Djidji, Schuurs, Rodriguez; Aina, Lukic, Linetty, Lazaro; Miranchuk, Vlasic; Sanabria
Juventus possible starting lineup:
Szczesny; Danilo, Bonucci, Bremer, Sandro; McKennie, Paredes, Rabiot, Kostic; Milik, Vlahovic