
Tensions are rising between AS Roma's coach Gian Piero Gasperini and Senior Advisor Claudio Ranieri over squad management and long-term planning. The club is facing challenges in achieving Champions League qualification, exacerbating internal pressures.
BURTON-UPON-TRENT, ENGLAND - AUGUST 08: AS Roma Senior Advisor Claudio Ranieri meets the coach Gian Piero Gasperini during his arrival at St Georges Park on August 08, 2025 in Burton-upon-Trent, England. (Photo by Fabio Rossi/AS Roma via Getty Images) | AS Roma via Getty Images
At some point over the last week, the conversation around Roma has drifted away from what’s actually happening on the pitch (largely a disappointment for the season) and toward something far more seductive: the idea that there’s a growing rift between Gian Piero Gasperini and Claudio Ranieri, that disagreements over squad management and long-term planning have finally boiled over into something resembling a power struggle. It’s a neat narrative that explains everything wrong with the Giallorossi while requiring very little evidence, and it’s exactly why it misses the point.
Whatever tension does exist between the two icons of Italian football (and there’s enough smoke here to suggest at least some fire) isn’t the cause of Roma’s current malaise. Roma aren’t stumbling toward a fractured internal structure and failing because of a purported falling out between Gasp and Rainieri. The club is staring down the reality of falling short of Champions League qualification yet again, and the pressure created by that failure is now seeping into every layer of the club.
The reported flashpoints are differing views on Lorenzo Pellegrini and how the squad should evolve within the constraints of Financial Fair Play. Those issues are issues that exist at every functional organization that has issues translating plans into reality; competing deadlines exist everywhere, and there is no unique “Roma Happens” to disagreements between executives over the path forward. Gasperini, a coach whose entire career has been built on drilling his ideas into a coherent, high-functioning system, is naturally inclined toward continuity and tactical discipline, while Ranieri, now operating in a more influential advisory role, is tasked with balancing that immediacy and Gasperini’s need to survive as Roma’s manager against the broader structural realities. Under normal circumstances, that push and pull is a necessary part of life.
Not long ago, there was still enough ambiguity in the table to sustain a sense of cautious optimism. The margins were tight but navigable. I genuinely felt that a patch of good form could cement Roma’s place in the top four even just a few weeks ago. Instead, the opposite has happened, and the margin for error has eroded to the point of nonexistence. With that shift away from truly believing that Champions League football is possible, the primary objective of the season has begun to slip away, and the club’s internal calculus changes. Every decision becomes one made under the storm cloud of a disappointing season, and tactical demands that once seemed aspirational start to look mismatched to the squad at hand. Most importantly, the age-old maxim that “winning solves everything” can’t be applied, and the natural friction between different layers of the club becomes visible in a way it hadn’t been before.
You could see that dynamic crystallize in Roma’s loss to Inter Milan, a loss that wasn’t utterly disqualifying on its face (hey, they’re going to win the Scudetto this year), but was disqualifying because of just how the club lost. All of the exciting elements of Roma’s season disappeared in that match; they looked like a team still searching for meaning, and Gasperini looked like he was still trying to reconcile his demanding tactical identity with a squad that only intermittently meets his demands. That stinging context makes the conversation shift from what Roma might become to what they currently are and once that shift happens, it becomes impossible to disentangle legitimate disagreement from the kind of narrative-building that fills the vacuum left by dropped points.
It’s worth emphasizing that nothing being reported here is especially exotic. Disagreements over a captain’s role, over whether to double down on a project or quietly pivot, over how to allocate limited resources: these are baseline tensions at any club trying to bridge the gap between ambition and reality. The only difference now is that Roma no longer have the results to keep those conversations internal. When you’re winning, those debates are framed as collaboration; when you’re not, they’re framed as conflict. The substance doesn’t change nearly as much as the perception does.
That’s why the idea of some irreparable divide between Gian Piero Gasperini and Claudio Ranieri feels overstated. The club is coming to terms with the fact that its season hasn’t unfolded the way it needed to and reacting accordingly. Gasperini’s frustration, to the extent that it exists, looks like the frustration of a manager who knows his margin for error is gone; Ranieri’s increased visibility looks like ownership wanting a steady hand involved as they start thinking about what comes next.
If anything, the more uncomfortable truth is that both men can be right about their respective concerns and Roma can still fall short. Gasperini can be justified in wanting continuity and better execution of his ideas, and Ranieri can be justified in thinking about sustainability and long-term balance. Neither of those positions will matter much if the team doesn’t produce the results required to reach the Champions League. That’s the bind Roma have worked themselves into, and that’s why this story feels louder than it probably is.
Roma set out to finish in the top four this season. That’s why the club invested in so many players, why they hired Gasperini, and why they continued to invest in January when some of the summer signings didn’t pan out. As that goal for the season slips further from reach, everything else takes on added weight. Any conversation around tension between different elements of Roma’s leadership needs to be contextualized in this way; otherwise, we’re just filling digital column inches with gossip.
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The tension stems from disagreements over squad management and long-term planning, particularly regarding player Lorenzo Pellegrini and Financial Fair Play constraints.
Roma's disappointing performance and failure to qualify for the Champions League are increasing pressure, which is contributing to the reported rift between the two figures.
The conflict could hinder the club's ability to implement effective strategies for squad evolution and may impact Gasperini's position as manager.
Key issues include differing views on player management, particularly with Lorenzo Pellegrini, and the challenges of adhering to Financial Fair Play regulations.






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