Italian football tried to make history… but the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) may have just pulled the plug.
Lega Serie A had a bold, groundbreaking plan: take a competitive league match — AC Milan vs Como — all the way to Perth, Australia in February 2026. It was supposed to be a fusion of necessity and opportunity, a way to solve stadium unavailability while showcasing Italian football to a global audience.
But now? The entire project is on life support.
With the San Siro set to host the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony, AC Milan suddenly had no home stadium from February 6th to late February. Their match against Como fell right inside that window. Instead of settling for another Italian venue, the club and the league decided to shoot for something bigger:
A fully official Serie A match in Australia.
Optus Stadium in Perth — 60,000 seats, loud fans, perfect weather — was the dream destination. It was meant to elevate the league, excite the huge Milan fanbase in Australia, and push Serie A’s brand into global relevance.
Because let’s be honest…
Premier League earns €2.2 billion yearly from international broadcasting.
Serie A? Just €200 million.
Paolo Scaroni, AC Milan’s president, said it best:
“This wasn’t a financial stunt. It was a chance to promote Italian football. But… the authorisations are too many, and now I’m worried.”
Everything seemed on track — FIFA okay, UEFA okay — until the AFC, who governs Australian football, raised two big red flags:
The AFC allegedly insisted that the match cannot be marketed as an official league game.
Imagine flying two Serie A clubs halfway across the world… only to call it a friendly.
Commercially? Dead on arrival.
This was the real deal-breaker.
For a match that affects league points, possibly title races, possibly relegation battles — the AFC reportedly wants their own referees, not Italy’s AIA.
That means different officiating styles, different VAR systems, different interpretations.
For Milan and Como, that’s a big no.
The Australian dream is fading fast.
With AFC approvals stalled and the clock ticking, organisers may have no choice but to bring the match back home.
The most likely outcome?
Delay the match until later in February when the San Siro becomes available again.
Not groundbreaking. Not global. But certainly drama-free.
This saga is a perfect case study for sports marketers, league administrators, and global football strategists:
**Brand expansion isn’t just ambition — it’s bureaucracy.
**Football governance can shape or break globalisation efforts.
**Stadium innovation and infrastructure matter for league competitiveness.
Serie A wants to close the gap with the Premier League.
But as this incident shows, global appeal requires more than star players and historic clubs — it needs coordination, modern stadiums, and flexible international partnerships.
And right now, Italy still has work to do.
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