:New President of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC), Gabriele Gravina (R) poses with FIFA President, Gianni Infantino following the vote during the elective assembly of the FIGC on October 22, 2018 at the Hilton hotel of Rome's Fiumicino airport. / A
ROME: Gabriele Gravina was elected president of the Italian football federation on Monday, bringing an end to a year of uncertainty.
The 65-year-old Gravina, a former Serie C president, was the only candidate and received 97.2 percent of the votes at an election assembly.
"Gabriele is one of you, someone who wants to change and relaunch Italian football," Gravina said. "We will change orientation and direction.
"The football that I want focuses on youth, but also on female football. I want a sustainable football, open to families, with modern and functioning infrastructure and a competitive national team."
The FIGC has been without a president since Carlo Tavecchio resigned in November after Italy's World Cup playoff loss to Sweden. Roberto Fabbricini was appointed emergency leader at the beginning of the year after a failed election to find a replacement.
"We will respond with facts, behavior and work. We need to know how to dream, plan and believe," Gravina said. "football can't wait. It's now that we have to give our all, putting ideas in place that help our soccer. Our world can return to being magnificent. We have just come off the back of a year of signs of instability and fragmentations. That's not the football I want."
Gravina is also known in Italy for his spell as president of Castel di Sangro - a football team from a city of 5,000 inhabitants. During his time at the helm - 1984-96 - the team won five promotions and reached Serie B.