UEFA · Europe
Italy
Gli Azzurri · The Blues
Four World Cup titles, two European Championships, and a style of football that turned tactics into art. Italy's Azzurri are among the most storied international teams in football history.
🎵Ciao, I am Lin!
Ciao! I am Lin! Italy's football story is one of the greatest ever told — four World Cup titles, the Azzurri blue kit, and players like Maldini, Baggio and Pirlo who turned football into pure art!
Quick Facts
First Italian Club
Genoa CFC — founded 1893
FIGC Founded
1898 — one of football's oldest national associations
Serie A Founded
1929 — one of football's oldest top-flight leagues
Registered Male Players
Approximately 1.4 million across Italy
Registered Female Players
Approximately 50,000 and growing fast
Professional Clubs
40 clubs across Serie A and Serie B
Discover Italy
Italy is a boot-shaped peninsula that stretches 1,300 km into the Mediterranean Sea. The Alps form a natural border along the north, while the Apennine mountain range runs like a spine down the full length of the country. Italy also includes two major island regions — Sicily and Sardinia — as well as hundreds of smaller islands.
Italy is one of the world's largest producers of olive oil and wine, and is famous globally for exporting Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, pasta, and other food products. Beyond food, Italy is a powerhouse in fashion and luxury goods — home to brands like Gucci, Prada, and Armani — as well as world-renowned sports cars through Ferrari and Lamborghini.
With a population of around 60 million, Italy is home to more UNESCO World Heritage Sites than any other country on Earth. From the Colosseum and the Sistine Chapel to the canals of Venice and the ruins of Pompeii, Italy's history and culture have shaped Western civilisation for thousands of years.
Map of Italy
🌍 Where in the World

Flag of Italy
The Italian tricolour features green, white, and red vertical stripes. It was inspired by the French flag during Napoleon's Italian campaigns and adopted as the national flag in 1948.
🏟️ The History of Italian Football
Italy are one of the most successful nations in football history. They won their first World Cup on home soil in 1934, then defended it in France in 1938 — Vittorio Pozzo remains the only manager ever to win the World Cup twice, and he did it with the Azzurri.
After winning the 1968 European Championship, Italy reached the 1970 World Cup final — a golden generation featuring Rivera, Mazzola and Riva. Then in 1982, Paolo Rossi returned from suspension to score six goals in Spain, including a hat-trick against Brazil, as Italy claimed their third World Cup title.
The 2006 triumph in Germany, with Fabio Cannavaro's heroic defending and Pirlo's genius in midfield, gave Italy their fourth star. Then in 2021, Roberto Mancini rebuilt the Azzurri completely — winning UEFA Euro 2020 in stunning fashion, going unbeaten in 37 matches including a Wembley penalty shootout win over England.
Key Results
- 1934🏆 Winner — home soil
- 1938🏆 Winner — Paris
- 1970🥈 Runner-up — lost to Brazil
- 1982🏆 Winner — Paolo Rossi golden
- 1994🥈 Runner-up — Baggio miss
- 2006🏆 Winner — Cannavaro lifts trophy
4
World Cup Titles — the most of any European nation
✨ Did You Know?
World Record Unbeaten Run
In 2021, Italy went 37 international matches unbeaten — a world record at the time — as Roberto Mancini transformed the Azzurri from World Cup absentees into European champions.
Four Stars on the Shirt
Italy's four World Cup titles are represented by four gold stars above the badge on their famous blue shirt — more than any other European team. Each star tells a chapter of football history.
The Art of Catenaccio
Italian football gave the world "Catenaccio" — a masterclass in defensive organisation that became the blueprint for modern defending. No European team has conceded fewer goals per game across World Cup history.
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Bring the World Cup Quest into class

Explore More Football Nations
Two World Cup absences shook Italian football, but with young stars like Donnarumma, Barella and Tonali emerging, the Azzurri are determined. A fifth World Cup star is the goal.
