Soccer-Juve held in dour draw, Napoli win to close gap on top two

MILAN, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Juventus missed a chance to extend their advantage over second-placed AS Roma when they played out a dismal 0-0 draw away to Udinese on Sunday, while Napoli closed in on Serie A's top two with a 2-1 win at Chievo. A Mauricio Pinilla scissors kick gave Atalanta a last minute 2-1 win over Cagliari, Fabio Quagliarella grabbed a hat-trick in Torino's 5-1 demolition of Sampdoria and Inter Milan's miserable form under Roberto Mancini continued as they lost 3-1 at Sassuolo. Juventus, with 50 points from 21 games, stayed seven clear of Roma although Carlos Tevez should have given them the points when he shot wide after being set up by Paul Pogba. Roberto Pereyra also hit the woodwork for the champions. Napoli's 2-1 win at Chievo, thanks to Manolo Gabbiadini's second-half winner, took them to 39 points, four behind Roma who drew 1-1 with Empoli on Saturday. Atalanta's Pinilla has now scored for 10 different clubs after his incredible acrobatic effort in the fourth minute of stoppage time. The ball was played into the penalty area behind the Chilean but he still managed to hook it over his shoulder into the net, stopping Cagliari's revival under Gianfranco Zola in its tracks. The Sardinians are just one point above the relegation zone. Quagliarella volleyed Torino ahead from a corner and converted a penalty on the half hour as Torino ripped into high-flying Sampdoria, then completed his hat-trick just after the hour by turning in Marco Benassi's pass. Samuel Eto'o came on for his Sampdoria debut only to see Amauri and Bruno Peres add two more for Torino while Pedro Obiang grabbed the visitors' consolation. Fourth place Lazio stayed level on 34 points with Sampdoria after a shock 2-1 defeat at relegation-threatened Cesena. Inter, who beat Sassuolo 7-0 in the same fixture last season, have taken only 10 points in 10 games under Mancini and dropped to joint 12th with 26 points, after being overtaken by both Sunday's opponents and Torino. (Writing by Brian Homewood in Berne; editing by Toby Davis)