Italian FA president Carlo Tavecchio has resigned after Italy’s World Cup qualifying fiasco saw the four-time champions miss the finals for the first time in 60 years, an FIGC official confirmed yesterday. The 74-year-old handed in his resignation during a crisis meeting of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) in Rome.
“He informed us of his resignation,” Damiano Tommasi, the head of the Italian Players’ Union, told journalists outside the federation headquarters. “Tavecchio took note of a change of scenario and the fact that some elements that in the past had supported him had some difficulties renewing this confidence,” added former FIGC president Giancarlo Abete, a member of the federal council.
Tavecchio had been under increasing pressure to step down after Italy’s failure to qualify for the World Cup last Monday, but he resisted promising to rebuild Italian football from grassroots level upwards. Italy coach Gian Piero Ventura was sacked last Wednesday after a 1-0 aggregate play-off defeat by Sweden saw the four-time champions miss the World Cup for the first time since 1958.
Tavecchio was elected president of the FIGC after a landslide vote in his favour in 2014 that saw 18 of the 20 Serie A clubs back him. He won the vote despite it coming just weeks after making racist slurs, referring to black players who “ate bananas” before they came to play in Italy.
FIGC elections to choose a new president will take place within a delay of 90 days. Italian football now finds itself without a federation president, national team coach, and presidents of both Lega Serie A and Lega Serie B, the top two divisions.

Arsenal name Mislintat head of recruitment

Arsenal have appointed Borussia Dortmund’s chief scout Sven Mislintat as their new head of recruitment, the Premier League club announced yesterday. Mislintat has spent 10 years at Dortmund and is credited with helping to recruit players such as Shinji Kagawa, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Ousmane Dembele and Christian Pulisic.
The 45-year-old German will take up his new role in December, working alongside Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger and chief executive Ivan Gazidis to identify potential new signings.
Arsenal’s chief scout Steve Rowley has stood down, but will continue to work with the club on a consultancy basis. 
Mislintat’s appointment is in line with the promise made by Gazidis to make changes behind the scenes at Arsenal after long-serving manager Wenger signed a two-year contract extension in May. It has been suggested Mislintat’s arrival will pave the way for Arsenal to appoint Dortmund’s sporting director Michael Zorc, although Wenger has expressed reservations about working with a sporting director.

Police urge West Ham fans not to dial 999
West Ham fans have been warned to stop calling the emergency services number 999 to complain about their team, who are languishing in the Premier League relegation zone. The Hammers suffered a 2-0 defeat at Watford on Sunday in David Moyes’s first match in charge, with goals from Will Hughes and Richarlison settling the match at Vicarage Road.
Some supporters have apparently been taking their grievances too far though, with the Essex Police Force Control Room urging them to stop using the emergency number. A tweet from the @EPControlRoom account read: “Ringing 999 because @WestHamUtd have lost again and you aren’t sure what to do is not acceptable! It is a complete waste of our time.#999foremergencies only.”
Sections of the visiting support chanted “sack the board” during the match as the team remained 18th in the Premier League table. West Ham host Leicester in their first home match since Moyes’s appointment on Friday.
Captain Mark Noble has urged unhappy supporters to rally behind their struggling team.