
Atalanta Beat Roma To Secure Champions League Spot
Atalanta qualified for the Champions League on Monday by beating Roma 2-1 and mathematically securing a place in Serie A's top four. Ibrahim Sulemana's strike in the 76th minute moved Atalanta, in third, seven points ahead of fifth-placed Lazio with two matches remaining in the season. Gian Piero Gasperini's team had taken an early lead through Ademola Lookman only for Atalanta old boy Bryan Cristante to head Roma level in the 32nd minute. But Sulemana ended Roma's long unbeaten run at 19 matches and left Claudio Ranieri's side one point behind Lazio and Juventus, who sit fourth.
Roma can still snatch a spot in Europe's top club competition but host in-form AC Milan next weekend while Juve welcome Udinese.
Reaching the Champions League would be a huge triumph for Ranieri as Roma looked like relegation candidates when he came out of retirement in November to take charge of his boyhood club for the third time.
Gasperini has been tipped to take over Ranieri after nine hugely successful years in the Atalanta dugout, winning the Europa League last season.
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Indian Express
6 hours ago
- Indian Express
Italy fires Spalletti amid prospect it could fail to qualify for 3rd straight World Cup
The fear that four-time champion Italy will fail to qualify for a third straight World Cup has cost coach Luciano Spalletti his job. Spalletti announced Sunday that he is being fired and will leave after Monday's World Cup qualifier against Moldova. The move comes two days after Italy lost 3-0 at Norway in its opening qualifier. 'Last night I had a conversation with the president (Italian soccer federation president Gabriele Gravina) and he told me that I would be fired,' Spalletti said in a pre-match news conference at Italy's training center. 'I didn't have any intention on (leaving) and I would have preferred to stay on. But it's a sacking and I realize that.' Claudio Ranieri, who just concluded a successful season at Roma but had said he was retiring from coaching, is reportedly the federation's top choice to replace Spalletti. But the federation did not immediately name a replacement — and after the Moldova game, Italy doesn't play again until September. Spalletti was hired in August 2023 when Roberto Mancini unexpectedly left to take over Saudi Arabia's national team. Spalletti was given a three-year contract through the 2026 World Cup. Spalletti's first major tournament ended with a disappointing 2-0 loss to Switzerland in the round of 16 of last year's European Championship. Then Italy was eliminated from the Nations League quarterfinals after conceding an embarrassing goal to Germany earlier this year — which meant that the Azzurri entered a five-team World Cup qualifying group featuring Erling Haaland's Norway instead of a four-team group in which the highest-ranked nation is Slovakia. Winning the group is the only way to ensure direct qualification to next year's tournament in North America. The second-placed team goes into the playoffs, the stage where Italy was eliminated by Sweden and North Macedonia and ruled out of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, respectively. Having started qualifying late, Italy has zero points and trails group leader Norway by nine points. What's more, key defender Francesco Acerbi — the center back who was supposed to mark Haaland — turned down the callup for the Norway and Moldova matches. 'I've always taken on this job as a service to the nation and I will do everything I can to help the future of the national team,' Spalletti said. 'I'll come to a contract resolution after tomorrow night. … I had all the support possible concerning the choices I wanted to make. But the results didn't come.'
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Business Standard
9 hours ago
- Business Standard
Italy fires Spalletti amid prospects of not qualifying for 3rd straight WC
The fear that four-time champion Italy will fail to qualify for a third straight World Cup has cost coach Luciano Spalletti his job. Spalletti announced Sunday that he is being fired and will leave after Monday's World Cup qualifier against Moldova. The move comes two days after Italy lost 3-0 at Norway in its opening qualifier. "Last night I had a conversation with the president (Italian soccer federation president Gabriele Gravina) and he told me that I would be fired," Spalletti said in a pre-match news conference at Italy's training center. "I didn't have any intention on (leaving) and I would have preferred to stay on. But it's a sacking and I realize that." Claudio Ranieri, who just concluded a successful season at Roma but had said he was retiring from coaching, is reportedly the federation's top choice to replace Spalletti. But the federation did not immediately name a replacement and after the Moldova game, Italy doesn't play again until September. Spalletti was hired in August 2023 when Roberto Mancini unexpectedly left to take over Saudi Arabia's national team. Spalletti was given a three-year contract through the 2026 World Cup. Spalletti's first major tournament ended with a disappointing 2-0 loss to Switzerland in the round of 16 of last year's European Championship. Then Italy was eliminated from the Nations League quarterfinals after conceding an embarrassing goal to Germany earlier this year which meant that the Azzurri entered a five-team World Cup qualifying group featuring Erling Haaland's Norway instead of a four-team group in which the highest-ranked nation is Slovakia. Winning the group is the only way to ensure direct qualification to next year's tournament in North America. The second-placed team goes into the playoffs, the stage where Italy was eliminated by Sweden and North Macedonia and ruled out of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, respectively. Having started qualifying late, Italy has zero points and trails group leader Norway by nine points. What's more, key defender Francesco Acerbi the center back who was supposed to mark Haaland turned down the callup for the Norway and Moldova matches. I've always taken on this job as a service to the nation and I will do everything I can to help the future of the national team, Spalletti said. I'll come to a contract resolution after tomorrow night. I had all the support possible concerning the choices I wanted to make. But the results didn't come.


India Today
9 hours ago
- India Today
Luciano Spalletti sacked as Italy head coach days after Norway thrashing
Luciano Spalletti's stint as Italy head coach has come to an abrupt end after the national team's humiliating 3-0 defeat to Norway in the World Cup qualifiers. The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) confirmed that Spalletti will step down after Italy's match against Moldova on Monday, marking a swift reaction to the team's worst start in qualifying 66-year-old made the announcement himself during a pre-match press conference, revealing that FIGC president Gabriele Gravina had informed him of the decision. While Spalletti insisted he had no plans to quit, the loss to Norway appears to have sealed his night we were very together with president [Gabriele] Gravina. He told me that I will be relieved of my position as coach of the national team," Spalletti said. "I had no intention of giving up. I would have preferred to stay in my place and continue doing my job. I'll be there [on Monday] evening against Moldova, then we'll resolve the contract," he took charge of Italy in August 2023, stepping in after Roberto Mancini's sudden departure. The former Napoli boss arrived with high expectations, fresh off a historic Serie A title win. But Italy's performances under his guidance proved erratic. The Azzurri were knocked out of Euro 2024 in the Round of 16 by Switzerland, winning only one game throughout the results have only deepened the crisis. The team has now gone three World Cup qualifiers without scoring — the worst such run in their history. The latest blow came against Norway, where Italy were thoroughly outplayed and went into half-time already three goals down. That defeat left Italy facing an uphill task to secure automatic Italy had shown signs of recovery in the Nations League — including a strong 3-1 win away against France — inconsistency has plagued their progress. A dramatic collapse against Germany in the Nations League quarterfinals earlier this year foreshadowed Friday's debacle in Oslo. After failing to qualify for the last two World Cups, the FIGC has decided it cannot afford another repeat — and Spalletti has paid the price.