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2026 FIFA World Cup
11MAY

FIGC race widens: Maldini, Del Piero, Albertini in play

2 min read
10:30UTC

Sports Minister Abodi is backing former AC Milan captain Paolo Maldini for the FIGC presidency, which would be the first time a former player has led Italian football.

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Key takeaway

No former player has ever led the FIGC; whether one does now will determine the reform narrative for Italian football.

Sports Minister Andrea Abodi endorsed Paolo Maldini for the FIGC presidency via La Stampa around 4 April, placing a former player at the centre of a race that has never produced one as winner. Alessandro Del Piero and Demetrio Albertini are also discussed. None has publicly confirmed interest.

Gravina's 8 April report establishes that the real constraint is legislative, not leadership. The candidates would inherit a structural problem requiring parliamentary action on betting levies, the Growth Decree, and tax credits for domestic talent investment.

Malago's commissioner route has precedent from 2018, referenced when the FIGC scheduled its 22 June election . The government may prefer that route to avoid a contested election during the reform window opened by Italy's elimination and the structural evidence in Gravina's report. The declaration deadline of approximately 13 May gives candidates five weeks to decide.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Italy needs a new football federation president after Gravina resigned. Names like AC Milan legend Paolo Maldini and World Cup winner Alessandro Del Piero are being discussed—which would be historic since no former player has ever led Italian football. The election is 22 June, but the government might bypass the election altogether and appoint a commissioner instead.

What could happen next?
  • A player-president without governance experience and without a legislative programme would be unable to implement the structural remedies Gravina's report recommends.

  • The Malagò commissioner route would avoid a contested election during the reform window but signal institutional continuity over disruption—the opposite of what Gravina's structural diagnosis suggests is needed.

First Reported In

Update #6 · FIFA's stealth price hike

Milan Reports (citing La Stampa)· 10 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
FIGC race widens: Maldini, Del Piero, Albertini in play
Whether the June election produces a player-reformer or another insider determines whether Italy's structural football crisis produces institutional change or continuity.
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