Can Gattuso Guide Italy Back to World Cup Glory?
By Luigi Arrieta·March 23, 2026
Italy has entrusted its World Cup revival to Gennaro Gattuso, a manager known for aggressive tactics and emotional intensity. With the Azzurri absent from the last two World Cups—a humiliation for European royalty—Gattuso faces the enormous task of rebuilding a squad and culture around qualification for 2026. His appointment signals both ambition and risk.
Italy’s Fall From Grace
The absence of Italy from the 2018 World Cup in Russia marked a watershed moment. A nation that had reached the final in 2012, won the Euros in 2020, and stood among Europe’s elite suddenly found itself watching from home. That shock only deepened when Italy failed to qualify again in 2022, missing Qatar despite winning their opening playoff match.
The psychological damage runs deep. Italian football has always carried historic weight—World Cup winners in 1934, 1938, 1982, and 2006. Missing consecutive tournaments represents not just a competitive failure but a cultural blow to a nation where calcio remains woven into national identity. Rebuilding requires more than tactical adjustments; it demands restoring belief across the entire structure.
Gattuso inherits a squad in transition. Experienced figures who carried Italy through previous campaigns are aging out. The midfield and defensive backbone need reconstruction. Yet pockets of talent remain—young players in top European leagues, technical creators, and defensive solidity that can form a foundation. The question is whether Gattuso can organize these elements into a cohesive force.
Gattuso’s Unproven Hands
Gennaro Gattuso brings credibility as a former Azzurri midfielder and tactical innovator. His playing career spanned Milan’s golden era, and his management record shows success at domestic level. However, leading a major international federation to World Cup qualification represents a different challenge entirely. Club football offers continuity; international fixtures demand rapid adaptation across compressed schedules and limited training time.
Critics label the appointment «risky» because Gattuso’s success has been inconsistent abroad. While he has proven he can implement a system and demand discipline, his record at top European clubs shows mixed results. International management requires balancing tactical ideology with player management at the highest level—knowing when to bend systems around exceptional talents rather than forcing them into rigid frameworks.
His appointment also signals Italy’s willingness to gamble on personality and tactical identity rather than continuity. Whether that pays dividends depends on whether Gattuso can command the respect of Italy’s established players while integrating promising youth. Early results will matter enormously in determining whether patience or criticism follows.
Impact on Latin American Football
Italy’s rebuilding effort carries implications for Latin American scouts and coaches. The Azzurri’s collapse created space for other federations to claim European dominance, but Italian football remains a magnet for Latin American talent. Young players from Colombia, Argentina, and Brazil continue viewing Serie A as a development destination. How Italy reconstructs—whether through imports or domestic development—sends messages about pathways for foreign players.
For Colombian football specifically, Italy’s weakening represents both opportunity and warning. Opportunity, because Latin American federations can now claim regional supremacy without Italy’s traditional European gatekeeping. Warning, because rebuilding works both ways; Italy may eventually reassert itself, and young Latin American players tracking Italian development should note how Gattuso’s tactical approaches might create openings for certain profile players—particularly creative midfielders and dynamic attackers comfortable pressing systems.
What’s Next
Gattuso begins World Cup qualifying with limited margin for error. The 2026 tournament expands to 48 teams, improving Italy’s mathematical chances, but the Azzurri cannot afford another false start. Qualifying matches begin soon, and early performance will establish whether the appointment was visionary or misguided.
For Latin American observers—scouts, coaches, young athletes—Italy’s transformation matters. If Gattuso succeeds, he may reshape opportunities for imported talent. If he fails, it confirms that rebuilding European powerhouses requires more than individual brilliance or tactical reputation. Either way, the next 18 months will tell whether risky can become brilliant, or whether Italy’s slide continues.

Fundador de Smidrat, la plataforma que conecta deportistas jóvenes con scouts y clubes en Latinoamérica. Apasionado por el deporte y la tecnología, trabaja para que el talento no pase desapercibido.
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