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Moggi says Italian football is broken and urges Gravina to resign

April 1, 2026 at 07:30 PM
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Quick summary

Former Juventus and Napoli executive Luciano Moggi says Italian football is in structural crisis after Italy's third straight World Cup elimination. He called for FIGC president Gabriele Gravina to step aside and backed Aurelio De Laurentiis' push for major reform.

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Attributed to original source

Luciano Moggi has launched a scathing attack on the state of Italian football in the wake of the Azzurri’s third consecutive World Cup elimination, calling for Gabriele Gravina to resign and demanding that Sports Minister Andrea Abodi intervene to force genuine structural change.

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The former Juventus and Napoli director, speaking on Radio Tutto Napoli, drew a direct line between Italy’s current crisis and the fallout from the Calciopoli scandal of 2006, arguing that Italian football has been in terminal decline ever since its last major triumph.

“Remember that the last great result was in 2006, when we won the World Cup with a strong leadership structure,” he said, via TuttoMercatoWeb .

“From that point, with the dawn of Calciopoli, Italian football was finished.”

ZENICA, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA – MARCH 31: (L-R) President of CONI Luciano Buonfiglio, President of FIGC Gabriele Gravina and UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin look on prior the FIFA World Cup 2026 European Qualifiers KO play-offs match between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Italy at Stadion Bilino Polje on March 31, 2026 in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina. (Photo by Getty Images/Getty Images) Moggi: ‘Italy broken at the core: the fish rots from the head, Gravina must step aside’ On Gravina, Moggi was unsparing. “The national team is a mirror of the system, if we have been eliminated three times, it means something is fundamentally broken at the base. The fish rots from the head, and therefore Gabriele Gravina should step aside. He has been neither lucky nor up to the task.”

His prescription for recovery was equally blunt. “We need to start from zero, a total clean-out. Minister Abodi should intervene seriously. Enough talk: what is needed is a real revolution.”

The suggestion that political intervention may be the only way to force meaningful change at the FIGC reflects a growing mood in Italy that the federation is incapable of reforming itself from within.

Moggi also backed Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis in his calls for a restructuring of Serie A.

“De Laurentiis is right, a general overhaul is needed because things cannot continue like this,” he said. “Today we have reached the point of being afraid of teams like Bosnia. That says everything.”

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What happened

Speaking on Radio Tutto Napoli, Luciano Moggi argued that Italy's repeated World Cup failure reflects deep problems across the football system. He linked the decline to the post-2006 Calciopoli era and said the national team mirrors wider institutional weakness. Moggi directly called on FIGC president Gabriele Gravina to resign and urged Sports Minister Andrea Abodi to force structural change. He also supported Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis in demanding a broader overhaul of Serie A and Italian football governance.

Chance analysis

This matters more as a governance signal than as direct squad news. Public pressure on FIGC leadership can increase instability around the Italy national team and reinforce a negative environment after a major failure. For football models, it is a soft-context indicator of institutional turbulence rather than a hard lineup or injury edge.

Impact

The likely effect is increased pressure and negative sentiment around Italy and the wider Italian football system, with little immediate on-pitch change by itself.

AI Insight

Treat this as low-immediacy governance noise with possible medium-term effects on Italy's stability, not as a direct match input.

Related entities
napolijuventusItalyFifa World Cup Qualification UefaSerie A

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Moggi says Italian football is broken and urges Gravina to resign

Former Juventus and Napoli executive Luciano Moggi says Italian football is in structural crisis after Italy's third straight World Cup elimination. He called for FIGC president Gabriele Gravina to step aside and backed Aurelio De Laurentiis' push for major reform.

Article summary

Speaking on Radio Tutto Napoli, Luciano Moggi argued that Italy's repeated World Cup failure reflects deep problems across the football system. He linked the decline to the post-2006 Calciopoli era and said the national team mirrors wider institutional weakness. Moggi directly called on FIGC president Gabriele Gravina to resign and urged Sports Minister Andrea Abodi to force structural change. He also supported Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis in demanding a broader overhaul of Serie A and Italian football governance.

This matters more as a governance signal than as direct squad news. Public pressure on FIGC leadership can increase instability around the Italy national team and reinforce a negative environment after a major failure. For football models, it is a soft-context indicator of institutional turbulence rather than a hard lineup or injury edge.

Source and timing

Published
Apr 1, 2026, 7:30 PM
Category
Editorial
Confidence
87%
Priority
Normal

Related teams, competitions, matches, and tags

  • napoli
  • juventus
  • Italy
  • Fifa World Cup Qualification Uefa
  • Serie A
  • Other

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Moggi says Italian football is broken and urges Gravina to resign | Chance Soccer News