FIFA president Gianni Infantino has confirmed that the Iran national football team will compete in the upcoming FIFA World Cup, with their matches set to go ahead in the United States as originally planned.
The statement follows persistent questions on Iran’s participation stemming from escalating geopolitical tensions with the United States and its allies.
While Iranian football officials had discussed shifting their matches to Mexico, FIFA has ruled out any calendar change.
In the group stage, with matches planned in major U.S. cities, Iran is set to play the New Zealand national football team, the Belgian national football team, and the Egyptian national football team.
Infantino stated that he believed the situation was under control after meeting with the team during a recent visit, emphasizing that, political history notwithstanding, plans remained on schedule.
Though football authorities are carrying on with plans, diplomatic disputes darken the contest, The News Chronicle gathered.
Earlier queries on logistics and safety came from opposing messages from political leaders on both sides, yet FIFA seems set on keeping the event intact.
Attention shifts to how international football negotiates the confluence of sport and geopolitics as the World Cup approaches and will be held in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

