Atalanta coach Gian Piero Gasperini does not intend to renew his contract with the Serie A club, though is open to the option of extending his current deal until 2026.
Gasperini, appointed Atalanta coach in 2016, has turned around the club's fortunes in his nine-year spell, transforming them from a mid-table side to Champions League regulars.
Under the 67-year-old, Atalanta won the Europa League trophy last season with an emphatic 3-0 victory over Bayer Leverkusen in the final.
Gasperini, whose team take on Empoli on Sunday, is under contract until June 2025 with an option to extend it by a year.
Asked if Atalanta, who are third in Serie A with 51 points from 25 matches, could secure qualification for the Champions League this season, Gasperini told reporters: "I have little time to do this, maybe it's the last one.
"Rightly so, as has been said there is a beginning and an end, we'll see at the end of the year whether to go for expiry or to stop, certainly there will be no continuity. There will be no further renewal and continuity."
In partenza!
— Atalanta B.C. (@Atalanta_BC) February 22, 2025
Taking off! #EmpoliAtalanta #GoAtalantaGo pic.twitter.com/wqhKXJMkw1
Atalanta have become one of the most entertaining teams in Serie A under Gasperini's tutelage.
Indeed, since he took charge, Atalanta have scored 641 league goals, which ranks behind only Inter (668) in that time.
However, Gasperini did cause some upset over the past week when he blasted Ademola Lookman following the striker's penalty miss against Club Brugge.
Lookman, Atalanta's hero last season when they won the Europa League, pulled back one goal for the Italian side when they were 3-0 down.
But the Nigerian, who has scored 15 times this season, had a penalty saved, which Gasperini said Lookman was not supposed to take as Charles De Ketelaere and Mateo Retegui were on the pitch.
In a post on Instagram, Lookman said Gasperini's comments singling him out were "deeply disrespectful" and hurtful.
Gasperini said: "It had an extraordinary impact, everything that came afterwards... it was not meant to be an offensive sentence.
"Yesterday in Udinese-Lecce we had what could have been a drama, luckily there were guys who let it go. I would have liked a strong player like Lookman to have made a gesture towards De Ketelaere saying 'come on keep the ball, put it in'.
"He can become a penalty taker, that would be an additional goal-scoring ability. I always speak in front of the whole team, it has never touched the club. He felt offended, I didn't want to offend anyone."