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2026 FIFA World Cup
11MAY

Serie A picks Malagò for FIGC, sidelining government

3 min read
10:30UTC

Lowdown Editorial Desk

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Italian clubs chose a candidate built for parliament; the government's preferred former-player narrative is now outside the real race.

Serie A confirmed Giovanni Malagò, the current CONI (Italian Olympic Committee) president, as its candidate for the FIGC presidency on 13 April, with 18 of 20 clubs backing him 1. The result settles the race into an establishment contest, not the former-player field that Sports Minister Andrea Abodi had briefed into the press in early April . Giancarlo Abete, a former FIGC president, is the candidate of the Lega Dilettanti, the amateur leagues federation. Lega Serie B is expected to follow Serie A. Paolo Maldini, Alessandro Del Piero and Demetrio Albertini appear in the conversation as post-election appointees under a new president, not as candidates.

Malagò will present his programme on 20 April. Three headline items: reinstatement of the Growth Decree, the fiscal instrument that gave Italian clubs a tax break for signing under-21s; repeal of the 2018 advertising ban on gambling sponsorship; and a 1% levy on sports betting turnover earmarked for football. All three require a parliamentary vote, which is precisely why the clubs have backed a CONI president with the cross-bench relationships to move them, rather than a former player whose authority is sentimental rather than legislative.

The vacuum the new president inherits is wider than the office itself. Gianluigi Buffon vacated his FIGC national-team role on 2 April alongside Gabriele Gravina's exit from the presidency after Italy's elimination by Bosnia . Head coach Gennaro Gattuso is described in Italian outlets as likely to depart. Candidates must declare by roughly 13 May; the Federal Council votes on 22 June. By the time the new president takes office, the national team setup will have been emptied at three layers simultaneously.

The pattern this confirms is the same one Antalya exposed on the Iran file: government-briefed narratives overtaken by institutional decisions made by the federations themselves. Abodi spoke for a former-player race; Donyamali spoke for relocation. Neither found their own federation in the room behind them.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Italy's football federation, the FIGC, needs a new president after the previous incumbent, Gabriele Gravina, resigned. Serie A, Italy's top football league, has put forward Giovanni Malagò, the current head of Italy's national Olympic committee (CONI). Eighteen of Serie A's 20 clubs back him. The Italian government wanted someone from football's playing side rather than a sports administrator. The clubs outvoted that preference. This matters for the World Cup because whoever becomes FIGC president will oversee Italy's national team programme at a time when Italy is trying to rebuild after missing consecutive World Cups. The question is whether the incoming president will have the authority and willingness to challenge club owners on player release schedules and national team preparation.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Italy has missed consecutive World Cups, 2018 and 2022, under a governance structure that separates the national team's football leadership from the federation's commercial and administrative apparatus. The CONI presidency gives Malagò fluency in the Italian sports bureaucracy (public funding, anti-doping, Olympic committee relations) but no track record of managing a professional football federation's coaching staff and player relationships.

The government's opposition to Malagò reflects a political calculation that a former-player president would be more publicly accountable, and more useful for government sporting prestige, than an administrator who reports upward to CONI rather than laterally to the clubs. The 18-club bloc's backing made that calculation irrelevant.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    With 18-of-20 club backing, Malagò's election as FIGC president is close to a formality unless the government finds a procedural mechanism to delay the vote, which FIGC statutes make difficult.

  • Risk

    A Malagò presidency backed by the clubs that created the structural conditions for Italy's World Cup absences reproduces the incentive problem: club interests will again have direct influence over federation decisions on coaching staff, player contracts, and training windows.

First Reported In

Update #7 · 57 Days to Go: Iran said yes in Antalya

ANSA· 15 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Serie A picks Malagò for FIGC, sidelining government
The clubs have overruled Italy's sports minister on the shape of the FIGC race and chosen the candidate whose CONI mandate gives him cross-bench access to the parliamentary instruments Italian football reform actually requires.
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