Iran qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup fair and square. They earned their place through months of qualifying matches across Asia.
Their players packed their bags, boarded their flights, and arrived in North America ready to compete on football’s biggest stage.
But for Iranian fans hoping to watch their team play, the dream has been crushed.
Iran’s football federation announced that the United States has revoked its official allocation of tickets for the team’s World Cup group games.
“The United States has once again acted to obstruct the presence of Iranian supporters at the stadiums hosting the national team’s three group stage matches”, the federation said in a statement.
The timing made it worse

Many Iranian supporters had already purchased tickets and made full travel arrangements through official channels.
The federation confirmed it was now unable to provide even a single ticket to supporters of the national team.
It described the move as “contrary to the spirit governing international competitions and the principle of equality among participating countries.”
The backdrop to all of this is a geopolitical crisis that has spilled directly into the tournament.
The US and Israel launched airstrikes on Iran in late February, killing the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that has since sparked an open conflict.
Iran’s sports minister was blunt in his assessment:
“Considering that this corrupt regime has assassinated our leader, under no circumstances can we participate in the World Cup.
“Our children are not safe and, fundamentally, such conditions for participation do not exist.”
But Iran’s players pushed back. The national team released a defiant statement saying no one can exclude them from competing, insisting that the World Cup is governed by FIFA, not by any individual country.
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Iran’s football chief Mehdi Taj confirmed the team had no intention of withdrawing from the tournament entirely, but that they intended to boycott matches scheduled to be played on American soil, with Mexico proposed as an alternative venue.
FIFA denied that request
The World Cup kicks off on Thursday. As Iran’s players plays on the pitch.
But their fans will watch from afar, locked out of the stadiums, locked out of the country, and locked out of a moment that football was supposed to give them.
The post No Tickets, No Fans and No Entry for Iran appeared first on Latest Sports News In Nigeria.
