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Italy's sport minister asks football chief to step down after World Cup disaster

The Azzurri fell at the play-offs again, this time after a penalty shoot-out against Bosnia and Hercegovina on Tuesday, and will miss this summer's finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Agencies
Rome, Italy
Thu, April 2, 2026 Published on Apr. 2, 2026 Published on 2026-04-02T12:07:56+07:00

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UEFA vice-president Gabriele Gravina looks on ahead of the start of the 50th UEFA Ordinary Congress in Brussels on February 12, 2026. UEFA vice-president Gabriele Gravina looks on ahead of the start of the 50th UEFA Ordinary Congress in Brussels on February 12, 2026. (AFP/Pau Barenna)

I

taly's Sport Minister Andrea Abodi said on Wednesday the head of the country's football federation should step down after the national team failed to qualify for a third consecutive World Cup.

The Azzurri fell at the play-offs again, this time after a penalty shoot-out against Bosnia and Hercegovina on Tuesday, and will miss this summer's finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

The head of the federation (FIGC), Gabriele Gravina, said he would not resign but a board meeting next week would decide whether he will keep his position.

"It's clear that Italian football needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and that starts with changes at the top of the FIGC," Abodi said in a statement.

Gravina has been in charge of the FIGC since late 2018, when he was elected to be the permanent replacement for Carlo Tavecchio who stepped down after Italy's first World Cup play-off disaster against Sweden the year before.

A FIGC source confirmed to AFP that Gravina would hold a meeting on Thursday afternoon with the heads of Italy's three professional divisions, and both the the players and referees' associations.

Fans in Italy were left stunned after Italy suffered a 4-1 penalty shootout loss to Bosnia on Tuesday following a 1-1 draw, their third playoff defeat in a row after losing to Sweden and North Macedonia.

"Everything went badly from the start of the match. The team wasn't good, players out of form coming in and playing (anyway)… it makes no sense. Honestly, I'm shocked," said Davide Caldaretta, who watched the game at a city pub.

"The Azzurri" last qualified for the World Cup finals in 2014, where Bosnia made their only previous appearance at the tournament. The Balkan team will play in Group B this year with co-hosts Canada, Qatar and Switzerland.

Some fans made their feelings known about Gravina and the FIGC by chucking eggs at the governing body's headquarters in Rome.

Abodi's comments come amid hostilities between the Italian government and Gravina, who when speaking to the media after Italy's defeat lashed out at a perceived lack of support or football from the state.

Gravina admitted that Italian football "is in a profound crisis".

"It is a crisis that requires serious reflection and not only by the FIGC but also from politicians who have only pushed for resignations," said Gravina.

He also referred to other sports as "amateur" and "state sports" compared to football due to the large number of athletes, particularly Olympians, who are nominally employed by different arms of Italy's armed forces and police.

Italy claimed a record 30 medals at the recent Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, including 10 golds, and left the 2024 Summer Games in Paris with 40 medals.

The Mediterranean nation also has top performers in a wide variety of other sports, with tennis star Jannik Sinner, a four-time Grad Slam winner, the most obvious example.

"I believe it is a mistake to deny responsibility for the third missed World Cup qualification and accuse the institutions of a presumed failure while downplaying the importance and professionalism of other sports," added Abodi, who has been sport minister in Giorgia Meloni's hard-right government since 2022.

Speed skater Francesca Lollobrigida, who won two Olympic golds this past winter, was one of several athletes to react to Gravina's comments, sarcastically saying on Instagram "I'm an amateur".

Even Oscar-winning actor Russell Crowe said he felt 'sick' on behalf of Italy.

"A dark dawn for Italy. The day after failing to qualify. Again," he wrote on X. "How is this possible with so much talent?"

 

 

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