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2026 FIFA World Cup
29MAY

CONI steps aside; ANAC alone rules on Malagò

3 min read
15:10UTC

Italy's Olympic Committee ruled the eligibility question over FIGC frontrunner Giovanni Malagò outside its remit and handed it wholly to the anti-corruption authority ANAC, which must rule before the 22 June vote.

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Key takeaway

ANAC alone now decides whether a 36-month cooling-off law bars Malagò from the 22 June FIGC ballot.

CONI, the Italian Olympic Committee, ruled on Friday 12 June that the eligibility question over Giovanni Malagò falls outside its remit and handed the matter wholly to ANAC, Italy's national anti-corruption authority 1. ANAC must now rule before the FIGC (Italian Football Federation) presidential election on Monday 22 June. Malagò is the frontrunner to lead Italian football, and the decision narrows the question to a single arbiter.

The dispute turns on a cooling-off rule most supporters never see. Italy's pantouflage law imposes a 36-month wait before a former public-sector chief takes a private role. Malagò left the CONI presidency in mid-2025 and filed his FIGC candidacy in May 2026, roughly 11 months later, well inside the bar if it applies to him. Sports minister Andrea Abodi referred the question to both bodies on 5 June , and CONI's withdrawal leaves ANAC with full discretion over whether the law reaches the case.

Malagò holds the backing of 18 of Serie A's 20 clubs. An adverse ANAC finding would strike him from the ballot 10 days before the assembly votes, forcing Italian football to choose a federation president with its presumed winner removed and no agreed alternative in place.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Italy's football federation (FIGC) needs a new president, with the vote scheduled for 22 June. The leading candidate is Giovanni Malagò, a well-connected former sports official who ran Italy's Olympic Committee (CONI) until mid-2025. Italian law says that senior officials of government-funded organisations must wait 36 months before taking another public role. Malagò left CONI only about 11 months ago, so a legal challenge was filed. Italy's Olympic Committee said the question was not their problem to resolve, and passed it entirely to ANAC, Italy's national anti-corruption watchdog. ANAC now has roughly 10 days to decide whether Malagò can legally stand. If they rule against him, Italian football faces a governing crisis with no agreed alternative candidate; 18 of Serie A's 20 clubs back Malagò.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The structural conflict arose because Italy's 2019 update to Legislative Decree 39/2013 extended pantouflage rules to senior officials of bodies that receive annual public funding above 500,000 euros, a threshold CONI has never come close to avoiding.

The legislature intended to close the revolving door between publicly funded sports administration and private-sector sports governance. But the law did not anticipate the scenario where two funded bodies in the same sector are competing for personnel; the spirit of the revolving-door rule addressed private-sector capture, not public-sector lateral moves.

Sports Minister Andrea Abodi compressed the calendar by setting the 22 June assembly date under pressure from Serie A clubs who wanted governance clarity before the next transfer window. That deadline, set before the pantouflage challenge emerged, gave ANAC no comfortable ruling window.

First Reported In

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