ROME, ITALY – NOVEMBER 09: Lorenzo Pellegrini of AS Roma celebrates scoring his team’s first goal from the penalty spot with teammate Wesley Franca of AS Roma during the Serie A match between AS Roma and Udinese Calcio at Stadio Olimpico on November 09, 2025 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by Paolo Bruno/Getty Images)
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Italy coach Gennaro Gattuso held his hands up after his team were dismantled at home by Norway in the final World Cup qualifier on Sunday night.
Needing to overcome their opponent by an improbable nine goals to secure automatic qualification, the Azzurri took the lead in the first half through Francesco Pio Esposito.
The extra eight goals required never came. Or rather, four of them did, with Erling Haaland scoring twice, Antonio Nusa and Jorgen Strand Larsen adding one each to complete a 4-1 rout for the visitors at the San Siro.
“We have to apologise to our fans,” Gattuso told Italian state broadcaster RAI after the game.
“This is a crushing defeat.”
The thrashing against Norway means Italy must negotiate the play-offs for the third time in 12 years to qualify for the World Cup, something it has failed to do since lifting the trophy in 2006.
The post-mortem after the defeat in Milan followed a predictable route, amid calls for Gattuso to be sacked to warnings Italian football is long beyond rescuing and everything in between.
But while Italy may miss out on another World Cup, Serie A remains in fine form.
Is Serie A the most entertaining league in Europe?
MILAN, ITALY – NOVEMBER 09: Lautaro Martinez of FC Internazionale celebrates after scoring their team’s first goal during the Serie A match between FC Internazionale and SS Lazio at Giuseppe Meazza Stadium on November 09, 2025 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)
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Yes, the heydays of the 1980s and 1990s when the self-styled “most beautiful league in the world” ruled over the beautiful game are long gone, but Italy’s top flight remains immensely entertaining.
That, admittedly, does not mean free-scoring. There were three 0-0 draws in the last round of Serie A fixtures before the international break, bringing this season’s tally to 17 scoreless affairs in 11 weeks.
In the Premier League, Erling Haaland has already scored 14 goals, while Kylian Mbappe and Harry Kane have scored 13 each in LaLiga and the Bundesliga respectively.
Over in France, Joaquin Panichelli has netted 12 goals for Strasbourg.
In Italy, meanwhile, the league top scorer is Hakan Calhanoglu with five goals, two of which came from the penalty spot.
But there is more to football than high-scoring matches and Serie A is currently home to a four-horse title race, with two points separating league leaders Inter Milan and Roma from AC Milan and reigning champions Napoli.
That is the biggest gap in any of Europe’s top five leagues, with Paris Saint-Germain two points clear of Marseille in Ligue 1 and Real Madrid three ahead of Barcelona in LaLiga.
Arsenal are four points ahead of Manchester City in the Premier League, while Bayern Munich are already six points clear of second-placed RB Leipzig in the Bundesliga.
To put the latter number into context, that is as big a gap as the one separating Inter and Roma from seventh place Como.
Serie A’s competitiveness isn’t new either. Since Juventus won nine titles in a row between 2012 and 2020, there have been three different winners in the intervening five seasons.
Inter won the Scudetto in 2021 and 2024, Napoli took the crown in 2023 and 2025 and Milan topped the table in 2022.
Over the same period, PSG and Bayern have won four titles each with their dominance only interrupted by Lille in 2021 and Bayer Leverkusen in 2024 respectively.
In Spain, meanwhile, the Barcelona-Real Madrid duopoly have shared two titles each over the past four years since Atletico Madrid triumphed in 2021.
As for the Premier League, only Liverpool’s record-equalling 20th title last season prevented City from winning an unprecedented fifth league title on the bounce.
Serie A’s new “seven sisters”
BOLOGNA, ITALY – NOVEMBER 09: Thijs Dallinga of Bologna FC 1909 celebrates scoring his team’s second goal with teammates during the Serie A match between Bologna FC 1909 and SSC Napoli at Renato Dall’Ara Stadium on November 09, 2025 in Bologna, Italy. (Photo by Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)
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More significantly, over the past five seasons, Inter are the only team to have always finished in the top four in Serie A.
Napoli and Milan won a combined three titles in the same period, but they both also experienced drastic declines with the Partenopei finishing 10th the season after triumphing in 2023 and the Rossoneri coming eighth last term.
Atalanta have finished in the top four three times, while Lazio, Fiorentina and Bologna, who claimed a first trophy in half a century last season, have all forced their way into the top seven at some stage.
On a continental level, Inter made the Champions League final in two of the past three seasons, albeit losing both, while Roma won the Europa Conference League in 2022 and Fiorentina lost the final in each of the following two seasons.
Atalanta, meanwhile, won the Europa League in 2024, a year after Roma had fallen at the final hurdle.
The parallels with the “Seven Sisters” era of the late 1990s and early 2000s when Juventus, both Milanese clubs, Lazio, Roma, Fiorentina and Parma were all challenging for the title are difficult to ignore.
In reality, the “Seven Sisters” tag was always somewhat of a misnomer as Juventus and Milan shared all but two titles between 1992 and 2004, with Lazio and Roma bucking the trend at the turn of the century.
The term swiftly became anachronistic as Inter won four titles in a row between 2006 and 2009, before Juventus reeled off nine on the bounce after Milan’s 2010 triumph.
And while the likes of Atalanta and Bologna may not have enough to mount a sustained title challenge – although the former came close under Gian Piero Gasperini – Serie A is no longer a procession.
As Antonio Conte noted after his Napoli side lost 2-0 away at Bologna before the international break, the time when big clubs could treat certain fixtures as formalities is long gone.
“I’m sorry to bring up old skeletons from the past but Napoli finished 10th after the third Scudetto (in 2023),” he said.
“In calcio, doing your job is not enough. You need passion, enthusiasm, heart.
As he urged some of his players to show some life, Conte added: “I don’t want to accompany the dead”.
While Conte may not want to consider his team’s own mortality, Serie A remains alive and kicking.