Italy rocked in Oslo as Spalletti hints at crisis talks
Soccer Football - World Cup - European Qualifiers - Group I - Norway v Italy - Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo, Norway - June 6, 2025 Italy coach Luciano Spalletti reacts Lise Aserud/NTB via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. NORWAY OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN NORWAY.
Coach Luciano Spalletti admitted Italy are going through a difficult patch after their humbling loss in Norway and said he would speak with the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) about the situation.
Italy have not reached a World Cup since 2014 — a painful drought for a nation that once stood proudly among football's elite with four world titles to their name.
With an abysmal start to the qualifying campaign, after being dominated by Norway in a 3-0 loss in Oslo on Friday, Spalletti is already under pressure.
His side were constantly punished by a Norwegian team that dominated on the counterattack and they were clearly second best on a rainy night at Ullevaal Stadium.
"We need a bit more enthusiasm, as individuals. We need to add something more, otherwise something has got to change," Spalletti told reporters.
"This is not who we are, because in terms of individuals, we can do more, but you can also see this is a difficult moment. A few things did happen to us, but this is the squad I chose and will continue with," he added.
When asked about his position as the manager of the Italian national team, Spalletti admitted that there would be difficult conversation coming up with the FIGC.
"I need to talk to President (Gabriele) Gravina about their intentions, their view on the decision I make," Spalletti said.
"I chose this group because I thought there was quality, but if we are so fragile that we don't keep an offside trap, we don't chase down opponents, then there is a lack of confidence.
"Quality isn't enough without that."
Spalletti was also asked if he is worried that the World Cup might be already out of reach after the Norway loss.
"There are always worries, because after a performance like that, you clearly have to ask yourself questions and realise there are problems, but you have to face them, because there is no other possibility," he said. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Independent Singapore
an hour ago
- Independent Singapore
Magnus Carlsen won 7th Norway Chess title after dramatic final round
Photo: Magnus Carlsen won the Norway Chess title for the seventh time after the unexpected turn of events during the competition. Carlsen made a strong comeback to secure a draw in a tough classical game against Arjun Erigaisi, and this result kept him out of reach of well-known rivals like D Gukesh and Fabiano Caruana. With this, he ensured his victory. Tournament highlights At the start of the final round, Indian Gukesh was only half a point behind Magnus Carlsen. Carlsen then faced Arjun Erigaisi, and following the first 34 moves, things were tough for the World No. 1. Erigaisi had then built a clearly better position and showed his sharp tactical skill. However, in just six moves, Carlsen turned the game around. With two knights and a rook, he gave a sudden counterattack and coordinated his pieces to challenge Arjun's king. Carlsen secured the draw through a three-fold repetition, enough to claim the title. Furthermore, the outcome could have gone to a tiebreak if Gukesh had drawn against Fabiano Caruana, which nearly happened. Caruana was winning on move 47 but blundered with a pawn push. Gukesh had a great chance to turn the game around, but on move 48, he made a mistake by using his queen to take a bishop and chose to promote a pawn to a queen. Caruana used this mistake to his advantage to trap Gukesh with a knight fork, which made Gukesh lose the game. With this, Gukesh missed out on the title, and also finished in third place, having Caruana overtaking him to finish second place. Here is the final standing at the end of the 2025 Norway Chess Tournament: Magnus Carlsen – 16 Fabiano Caruana – 15.5 D Gukesh – 14.5 Hikaru Nakamura – 14 Arjun Erigaisi – 13 Wei Yi – 9.5 In a social media post, Carlsen shared: 'Norway Chess and Norwegian football✔️✔️' Netizens flooded the post with praise, celebrating Magnus Carlsen's win. One wrote, 'Imagine being in your worst form ever and still end up winning the toughest classical tournament of this year!!! Aura of the god of chesssss, the greatest chess player everrr! GOAT Sven Magnus Carlsen 😭' Another said, 'Always the G.O.A.T. and the KING 👑 of chess.' A third chimed in, 'Congrats, No. 1. You showed exactly why you're at the top. You're not just a champion—you're a true inspiration.' On the women's side, Koneru Humpy missed out on winning the tournament when she failed to defeat world champion Ju Wenjun in the final round of the classical game. Anna Muzychuk took home the women's title, even after losing the Armageddon game to R Vaishali in the last round.

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Canadian teen McIntosh shatters 400 metres freestyle record
FILE PHOTO: Aug 23, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Multiple gold medal winning Canadian Olympian Summer McIntosh poses with her Olympic medals at the Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-USA TODAY Sports/File photo REUTERS Canadian three-times Olympic champion Summer McIntosh set a world record in the women's 400 metres freestyle at the Canadian Swimming Trials in Victoria, British Columbia, on Saturday. The 18-year-old clocked 3:54.18 to better Australian Ariarne Titmus' mark of 3:55.38 set at the 2023 World Championships in Fukuoka, Japan. "Going into tonight, I knew that my training has been really good these past few months, and I knew that I could do something special," McIntosh told public broadcaster CBC. "So being able to input my training in doing that - I didn't think my training would be 54.1 but I'm really happy with that." At the Paris Olympics, McIntosh became the first athlete from Canada to win three gold medals at a single Olympic Games. In Paris, the four-times World Aquatics champion won gold in the 400 metres individual medley, 200 butterfly and 200 individual medley, as well as taking silver in the 400 freestyle. But things felt different at the Canada trials. "I just felt so strong throughout, and that's never been the case in the 400 freestyle for me. That last 100, I'm always really, really hurting. "But I flipped at the 200 and I was just cruising, so I knew that I was having a strong swim. I could tell by the crowd and knew the way they were cheering that I was probably close to the world record. "So I really tried to push that last part for them." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Mixed Martial Arts-Dvalishvili, Harrison win bantamweight belts at UFC 316
Jun 7, 2025; Newark, New Jersey, UNITED STATES; Merab Dvalishvili (red gloves) reacts after defeating Sean O'Malley (not pictured) in a bantamweight title fight during UFC 316 at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images REUTERS NEWARK, New Jersey - Georgia's Merab Dvalishvili scored a second-round submission win over Sean O'Malley to retain his bantamweight title at UFC 316 on Saturday, with Kayla Harrison also winning by submission in the co-main event, tapping out Juliana Pena to claim the women's bantamweight crown. With President Donald Trump sitting cage-side at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, Dvalishvili set about defending the title he won from O'Malley in September by putting his opponent under tremendous early pressure, stalking him around the cage and mixing up his striking with takedown attempts. O'Malley defended well against his opponent's aggressive offensive wrestling but was eventually taken down in both rounds, and Dvalishvili ended the fight by using his crushing top pressure to secure a choke at the 4:42 mark of the second round. "I'm on top of the world. I'm a world champion. I come from nothing. I'm so grateful to inspire so many young generations to show my example," the 34-year-old Dvalishvili said in a post-fight interview. Asked about his incredible stamina and pressure, he said he was nothing special and that it all came down to training. "It's just work - every day, repeat, training. You know, number one for me is just wake up, training and after I can hang out, enjoy with my friends, go to church, looking for wife or whatever you want to do," he explained. In the co-main event, two-time Olympic judo champion Harrison used her superb grappling to dominate Pena, locking in a kimura submission with five seconds to go in the second round. In her victory speech, Harrison called out retired Brazilian former two-weight champ Amanda Nunes, summoning her into the cage where the two agreed that they would face off in a future fight. Nunes has not fought since beating Irene Aldana in June 2023. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.