
Who will be Italy’s next coach?
According to reports in Italy, Roberto Mancini and Antonio Conte are the frontrunners to become...
According to reports in Italy, Roberto Mancini and Antonio Conte are the frontrunners to become the new Italy coach after the Azzurri failed to qualify for the World Cup for the third consecutive time.
Italy have not participated in the World Cup for 12 years, and their new coach will have qualification for the 2030 tournament as the main goal.
The Azzurri finished their 2026 World Cup qualification group in second behind Norway, so they were forced to play in the play-off qualifier, meeting Northern Ireland in the semis and Bosnia and Herzegovina in the final.
They were naturally the favourites to qualify, but those who feared the Azzurri would feel the pressure after two missed qualifications eventually reaped the rewards on Melbet.
In the wake of Italy’s third consecutive fiasco, coach Gennaro Gattuso resigned, followed by FIGC President Gabriele Gravina, who was replaced a few months later by Giovanni Malagò, elected on June 22, 2026, with nearly 69% of the vote from the various components of Italian football.
The big priority for Malagò will be to appoint Italy’s new coach, and, as things stand, Mancini and Conte, a former Napoli coach, are the main candidates for the job.
Other coaches have been mentioned by Italian media, including Pep Guardiola, but it’s likely that the competition will eventually be reduced to a two-horse race between Mancini and Conte.
Both have already coached the Italy national team. Mancini won the Euros in 2021 but failed to qualify for the World Cup the following year, while Conte reached the quarter-finals at the 2016 Euros.
Malagò is aware that the decision on the new coach is one of the first he has to make, alongside appointing a technical director, identified as Paolo Maldini, with an offer already sent.
In his first press conference after his election as the FIGC President, Malagò said: “If it weren’t for a penalty, I wouldn’t be here now.
“It is incredible that Gravina was re-elected a year ago, practically by unanimous consent, and yet he was unable to push through any of the proposed reforms.
“Objectively, the situation is completely fossilised. I will continue to defend the autonomy of sport, but if we don’t manage to change our ways, then someone will have to put us into a position to change. It is very simple.”
Another big target of Malagò will be to identify the venues for Euro 2032, which Italy will co-host with Turkey.
“EURO 2032 is a challenge within a challenge. I spoke to (UEFA President Aleksandar) Ceferin over the last few days, and already received messages from (FIFA President Gianni) Infantino,” he added.
“Michele Uva is our organisational figure with UEFA, we’ve got to identify these five stadiums,”
Continue with Matchday Global
Source: Football Italia
More stories

Palestra to Chelsea: What Does It Mean for Italy? Has He Betrayed Inter? Video

Inter could reinvest Palestra funds on Nico Paz from Real Madrid instead

Atalanta teach a lesson in sales - €100m from Man United and Chelsea before July
