Berliner Boersenzeitung - Political foes Iran, US ready for World Cup battle

EUR -
AED 4.029106
AFN 75.470416
ALL 98.662886
AMD 426.293985
ANG 1.985144
AOA 1012.482896
ARS 1072.047246
AUD 1.614214
AWG 1.974506
AZN 1.854297
BAM 1.953481
BBD 2.22396
BDT 131.623761
BGN 1.955943
BHD 0.41321
BIF 3195.606787
BMD 1.096948
BND 1.429703
BOB 7.610966
BRL 5.986251
BSD 1.101493
BTN 92.42529
BWP 14.569706
BYN 3.604621
BYR 21500.179101
BZD 2.220165
CAD 1.488393
CDF 3149.337198
CHF 0.942909
CLF 0.036776
CLP 1014.765465
CNY 7.698874
CNH 7.786416
COP 4614.822166
CRC 571.321836
CUC 1.096948
CUP 29.06912
CVE 110.13427
CZK 25.359023
DJF 196.137183
DKK 7.459087
DOP 66.241371
DZD 146.264383
EGP 53.073671
ERN 16.454219
ETB 131.76779
FJD 2.426942
FKP 0.835391
GBP 0.836406
GEL 3.006053
GGP 0.835391
GHS 17.425316
GIP 0.835391
GMD 75.689183
GNF 9509.71189
GTQ 8.522883
GYD 230.43647
HKD 8.517658
HNL 27.38849
HRK 7.458161
HTG 145.227614
HUF 401.286027
IDR 17189.173802
ILS 4.183655
IMP 0.835391
INR 92.176918
IQD 1442.88728
IRR 46186.99179
ISK 148.811817
JEP 0.835391
JMD 174.043409
JOD 0.777184
JPY 163.127667
KES 142.091336
KGS 92.908111
KHR 4470.693248
KMF 492.475019
KPW 987.2525
KRW 1477.44634
KWD 0.336028
KYD 0.91791
KZT 531.948572
LAK 24322.129422
LBP 98635.319023
LKR 323.496007
LRD 212.577668
LSL 19.243058
LTL 3.239002
LVL 0.663533
LYD 5.252765
MAD 10.773712
MDL 19.325061
MGA 5045.011528
MKD 61.546943
MMK 3562.844033
MNT 3727.42896
MOP 8.808145
MRU 43.606239
MUR 50.997313
MVR 16.838233
MWK 1909.932893
MXN 21.156763
MYR 4.630766
MZN 70.093214
NAD 19.243058
NGN 1796.449628
NIO 40.531888
NOK 11.687766
NPR 147.880465
NZD 1.781135
OMR 0.422358
PAB 1.101493
PEN 4.10313
PGK 4.386793
PHP 62.133869
PKR 305.653786
PLN 4.312887
PYG 8585.808571
QAR 4.016033
RON 4.976874
RSD 116.880262
RUB 104.995014
RWF 1492.328593
SAR 4.120444
SBD 9.081317
SCR 16.465141
SDG 659.814949
SEK 11.372695
SGD 1.429656
SHP 0.835391
SLE 25.062301
SLL 23002.443628
SOS 629.452834
SRD 34.225682
STD 22704.607077
SVC 9.63756
SYP 2756.114471
SZL 19.235168
THB 36.558534
TJS 11.730476
TMT 3.850287
TND 3.3694
TOP 2.569162
TRY 37.593535
TTD 7.470133
TWD 35.416021
TZS 3001.437268
UAH 45.346873
UGX 4039.205428
USD 1.096948
UYU 46.06532
UZS 14033.342301
VEF 3973751.443604
VES 40.575494
VND 27171.399813
VUV 130.23186
WST 3.068671
XAF 655.179297
XAG 0.034084
XAU 0.000414
XCD 2.964556
XDR 0.819128
XOF 655.179297
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.566393
ZAR 19.170975
ZMK 9873.851336
ZMW 28.995582
ZWL 353.216781
  • SCS

    0.3500

    12.97

    +2.7%

  • RBGPF

    58.9400

    58.94

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.7

    -0.16%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    66.5

    -0.71%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.66

    -0.31%

  • GSK

    0.4500

    38.82

    +1.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    6.98

    0%

  • RIO

    -0.1300

    69.7

    -0.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.0770

    24.813

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    35.29

    +0.51%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    46.29

    -0.69%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    138.9

    +0.44%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    33.71

    -0.39%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    77.47

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.28

    -0.15%

  • BP

    0.4200

    32.88

    +1.28%

Political foes Iran, US ready for World Cup battle
Political foes Iran, US ready for World Cup battle / Photo: PATRICK KOVARIK - AFP/File

Political foes Iran, US ready for World Cup battle

Twenty-four years after their first World Cup meeting billed as the "Mother of all football matches", Iran and the United States face off in a politically-charged showdown on Tuesday with a place in the knockout rounds up for grabs.

Text size:

Decades of mutual enmity between the arch geopolitical foes is the backdrop to what promises to be a white-hot sporting occasion at Doha's Al Thumama Stadium.

In the context of the tournament, the stakes are simple -- a win for either team secures a place in the last 16 while defeat will guarantee elimination.

But the wider significance of the Group B contest is less clear-cut.

The United States and Iran have been bitter ideological enemies for more than four decades, severing diplomatic relations after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Quite what bearing that has on a 90-minute World Cup football match involving 22 players remains to be seen.

United States coach Gregg Berhalter has been at pains to dampen down suggestions that the game carries a political dimension.

"I envision the game being hotly contested for the fact that both teams want to advance to the next round -– not because of politics or because of relations between our countries," Berhalter said.

"We're soccer players and we're going to compete and they're going to compete and that's it."

Yet Berhalter's desire for politics to be absent from the occasion may be wishful thinking.

A rare public relations gaffe by US Soccer -- posting a modified version of Iran's national flag on the US team's social media feeds in what it said was a gesture of solidarity with Iranian women protesters -- has infuriated football authorities in Tehran.

The offending post was removed from official US Soccer feeds on Sunday after the Iran Football Federation lodged a complaint with world governing body FIFA.

The controversy almost certainly guarantees that what was already shaping as a nail-biting showdown on Tuesday is likely to carry a crackle of political tension.

- Handshakes and roses -

That was certainly the case when Iran and the USA met for the first time at the 1998 World Cup in France, the Iranians claiming a memorable 2-1 victory at the Stade Gerland in Lyon.

Political intrigue seeped into the build-up to the match with a row over the pre-game rituals.

Iran, the designated away team, refused to abide by the standard FIFA protocol of walking over to the American players for the handshake before kick-off.

That potential flashpoint was deftly defused by Swiss referee Urs Meier, who suggested that the two teams pose for a joint team photo.

Iran's players, who presented US players with bouquets of white roses to symbolise peace, happily complied, linking arms with their American counterparts.

Iran coach Jalal Talebi and veteran defender Mohammad Khakpour would later reveal how much the Iranians had invested emotionally in the game, viewed in some quarters as a battle against representatives of the "Great Satan."

"Just imagine being told for six months, repeatedly, that this game is the most important game in our history, which it really was," Talebi said in a 2018 interview.

Khakpour added: "I personally was contacted by people whose family members had been martyred, those who had lost children in the Iran-Iraq war. Fathers, mothers, called and said 'This game really does matter to us. You have to go and win this game for us.'"

The USA's coach at the 1998 World Cup, Steve Sampson, has since expressed regret that he did not use the political tensions between the two countries as a motivator.

"We were asked by FIFA, by US Soccer, by the organising committee in France, to make it about football, and not about politics. And I went along with that," Sampson told Time magazine.

"In hindsight, I would have made it about politics. A coach's job is to use any and every tool available to him to prepare his team."

Yet the American class of 2022 insist that politics won't come into the latest instalment of the US-Iran World Cup rivalry.

"The emotional side of having to win to get to the next round is enough to be up for it," US defender Tim Ream said on Sunday. "I don't think we have to worry about anything else.

"What is on the line is advancing into the knockout stages. And if that's not enough then I think we have issues."

(F.Schuster--BBZ)