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Italy appoint Gattuso as manager

 Fomer AC Milan and Napoli manager, Gennaro Gattuso, has been appointed Italy national team coach, the Italian football federation (FIGC) said on Sunday.

Gattuso replaces Luciano Spalletti, who was sacked last week following a heavy defeat by Norway in a World Cup qualifier. The former midfielder will be formally introduced as coach on Thursday at Rome’s Parco dei Principi Hotel.

Spalletti departed after a stint of under two years, overseeing his final match, a 2-0 victory against Moldova, just a day after revealing he had been dismissed following Italy’s 3-0 defeat by Norway in their opening World Cup qualifier.

Gattuso, who won the Coppa Italia with Napoli in 2020, is tasked with getting four-times World Champions Italy to next year’s World Cup, after they missed out on the last two edi­tions of the tournament.

An FIGC source told Reuters the 47-year-old has been given a one-year contract, including the World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Gattuso made 73 appearances for Italy and was a member of the 2006 World Cup-winning squad. He recently left Croatian club Hajduk Split by mutual consent, after a third-placed finish in the country’s top flight.

FIGC member Gianluigi Buffon had discussed Gattuso’s appointment on Saturday. Veteran Italian coach Claudio Ranieri was the FIGC’s top candidate for the role, but the 73-year-old declined the offer, choosing instead to con­centrate on his position as senior advisor at AS Roma.

Italy, third in World Cup quali­fying Group I, will host Estonia in Bergamo on September 5 before taking on Israel in Hungary three days later.

Gattuso began his coaching career as player-coach at Swiss club Sion in 2013 where he finished his playing days after 13 seasons with Milan but was fired after winning two of his 10 league games in charge.

Over a 12-year coaching jour­ney, Gattuso has led nine clubs, including Milan, Spanish side Valencia, and a brief stint at Ligue 1’s Olympique de Marseille.

Lazio coach Maurizio Sarri, who previously managed Chelsea, Napoli and Juventus, backed Gat­tuso and said there was a discon­nect between the quality of Italian clubs and the national team, who won Euro 2020 but only reached the round of 16 in last year’s Eu­ropean Championship.-Reuters

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