Italy hoping to scale World Cup 'Everest' ahead of Bosnia play-off showdown
Gennaro Gattuso is the Head Coach of Italy during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifiers, Group I football match between Italy and Norway in San Siro, Italy, on November 16, 2025. (Photo by Alessio Morgese/NurPhoto) (Photo by Alessio Morgese / NurPhoto / NurPhoto via AFP)
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Italy have one last obstacle standing between them and a
return to the World Cup in the shape of Bosnia and Herzegovina, who host the Azzurri
on Tuesday in what promises to be a tense qualification play-off final in
Zenica.
A battling win over Northern Ireland in last week's
semi-final did little to ease Italian supporters' fears about missing out on a
third straight World Cup, goals from Sandro Tonali and Moise Kean stopping a
lacklustre display from turning into another disaster.
Coach Gennaro Gattuso called Tuesday's showdown in Zenica
"Everest" due to the weight of expectation on his shoulders to guide
Italy back to the world's biggest football tournament after 12 years away.
The prize for Italy is a spot in Group B at this summer's
finals alongside co-hosts Canada, Switzerland and Qatar, and something to look
forward to for a powerful football nation that has fallen behind its rivals
since last lifting the World Cup in 2006.
Gattuso has said that he's not "interested in the
performance" of his players in what will be a soaking and rowdy Bilino
Polje Stadium, which has seen snow in the last few days.
"When you do this job you want to experience nights
like this, there's nothing better," Gattuso told reporters on Monday.
"Throughout our history we have got our greatest
victories not necessarily by playing the best football but digging in, showing
pride and an impeccable mentality."
But his players have also come under fierce criticism for
the way they greeted Bosnia's win on penalties over Wales in Tuesday's other
semi-final.
A group of players, most prominently full-back Federico
Dimarco, were filmed fist-pumping in celebration when Kerim Alajbegovic shot
Bosnia's winning spot-kick in Cardiff.
That gesture led former Roma and Juventus midfielder Miralem
Pjanic to tell the Gazzetta Dello Sport that "Bosnia is waiting for them
with open arms".
The controversy even caused former Italy goalkeeper Dino
Zoff, a World Cup winner in 1982, to criticise the current team for making
their task in Bosnia more difficult than it needs to be.
"It wasn't a good thing to do because it will just further
fire up our opponents, I would have behaved differently," Zoff told
newspaper Il Giornale.
Dimarco was wheeled out on Sunday to put an end to the
controversy, the Inter Milan star insisting that he "wasn't showing
disrespect for Bosnia or the Bosnian people".
"I've heard people say we were arrogant. There's really
no reason to be, we've missed the last two World Cups," said Dimarco.
That so much attention is being placed on such an innocuous
gesture from a group of players is emblematic of the tension surrounding
Tuesday's match.
Italian media have even suggested that Clement Turpin being
selected as referee is a bad omen, as the Frenchman was the official in charge
of the play-off disaster with North Macedonia which cost Italy a place at the
2022 World Cup in Qatar.
But more than superstition it will be a dangerous opponent
and hostile crowd that will be Italy's biggest hurdle.
Bosnia captain Edin Dzeko showed with his late equaliser in
Cardiff that at the age of 40 he can still do damage up front and his
successful career in Italy with Roma and Inter will also add to the fear
factor.
Dzeko could play alongside Red Bull Salzburg forward
Alajbegovic, a promising 18-year-old who will join Bayer Leverkusen in the
summer, and who set up his veteran teammate's goal on Thursday.
"Italy won't underestimate us, but they don't have
players like (Francesco) Totti or (Alessandro) Del Piero anymore. They have
good players, but it's a different type of player than once upon a time,"
said Dzeko on Monday.
"It's up to us to show what we're made of. We're
playing at home with the support of our fans. Italy could find themselves in a
lot of trouble against us."

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