Giovanni Malago won the presidency of the FIGC (Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio), Italy's football federation, on 22 June with 68.58% of the weighted vote against Giancarlo Abete's 29.17%. 1 He took 343,084 weighted votes to Abete's 145,936, with 266 of 273 delegates present at the Rome Cavalieri. 2 The margin was far wider than the 54/46 split the federation's leagues had signalled going in , a scale that hands him a clearer mandate than the contest's framing had predicted.
Malago ran CONI (Comitato Olimpico Nazionale Italiano), Italy's Olympic committee, from 2013 to 2025, and replaces Gabriele Gravina, who resigned after Italy failed to reach the 2026 finals. His first task is naming a national-team head coach, a job he says he has not yet discussed with anyone. 3 The harder file is roughly 5.5 billion euros of collective club debt that only Parliament can address, which is why the clubs backed an administrator with cross-bench access. Malago and Abete agreed Italy has too many professional clubs and split on the cure: Abete wanted to shrink the leagues, while Malago prefers stricter licensing to thin the field without restructuring the divisions. 4
