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What will happen if Iran pulls out of the FIFA World Cup 2026?

If Iran pulls out of the FIFA World Cup 2026, a replacement may have to be found.

Iranian men's football team wearing white jerseys

Iran's sports minister said there is no way that the nation's soccer team will compete in this summer's FIFA World Cup in North America. Source: AAP / AP / ColorChinaPhoto / Liu Zhankun

in brief

  • Iran is looking to exit the FIFA World Cup, with Iraq a likely replacement, if confirmed.
  • The tournament is taking place in June across North America.

Iran’s sports minister has said the country's national football team will not take part in this summer's FIFA World Cup 2026, citing safety concerns.

Ahmad Donyamali spoke about the issue on Wednesday evening amid the ongoing war in the Middle East, which has killed around 2,000 people in Iran and Lebanon, according to Reuters analysis.

The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said more than 1,100 children had been killed or injured.

Despite Iran's ongoing conflict with Israel and the United States, the latter had confirmed the team was welcome to compete in the upcoming tournament in North America, which would be the country's fourth consecutive World Cup.

The statement from the Iranian minister casts significant doubt on the country's participation, though the decision will ultimately be one for The Football Federation Islamic Republic of Iran.

It comes shortly after members of the Iranian women's football team claimed asylum while touring Australia this week.

'Absolutely no way', Donyamali says

Donyamali said that the "conditions needed" for Iran to participate in the World Cup "do not exist".

"Since this corrupt regime has killed our leader, there is absolutely no way we can join the World Cup. Our children are not safe," he said, according to CBS Sports.

"Because of their hostile actions against Iran, they have pushed two wars on us within eight or nine months and have caused the deaths and martyrdom of thousands of our people. For that reason, we cannot appear at the tournament."

His statement came after FIFA president Gianni Infantino and US president Donald Trump talked about Iran's participation on Tuesday.

They said the Iranian team would still be allowed to compete when the World Cup begins on 11 June in the US, Mexico and Canada.

"Tonight I met with the President of the United States, Donald J Trump, to talk about preparations for the upcoming FIFA World Cup and the rising excitement as the event is now only 93 days away," Infantino wrote on social media.

"We also discussed the current situation in Iran and the fact that the Iranian team has earned a place in the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

"President Trump repeated that the Iranian team is welcome to play in the tournament in the United States."

Who could replace Iran?

FIFA has not confirmed that Iran has officially withdrawn from the competition, nor has it said which team would take Iran's place at the time of publishing.

Iraq is considered the most likely replacement as the next eligible team from the Asian Football Confederation.

Iran is placed in Group G and is set to play New Zealand and Belgium in Los Angeles; it is then set to face Egypt in Seattle.

However the replacement team would not have to come from the same federation as Iran.

Women's players offered asylum in Australia

Meanwhile, six people connected to the Iranian women's football team, the Lionesses, have been granted asylum in Australia.

The team had been in the country playing as part of the Women's Asian Cup when members requested protection.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke confirmed Australia privately offered asylum to most of the Iranian women’s football players during their visit. Seven accepted while some declined, and one of the seven later changed her mind.

Burke had earlier on Wednesday confirmed that a player and a support staff member had been offered protection, after five players broke free from their Iranian handlers and were granted protection overnight on Tuesday.

He said when the team touched down in Sydney before flying out of the country, Home Affairs officials individually took all players and their support people into a room — without minders present — to extend them a similar offer.

After flying out of Sydney, the remaining cohort landed in Malaysia's capital, Kuala Lumpur, on Wednesday morning.

There are fears for the team's safety on their return to Iran after they were labelled "wartime traitors" by Iranian state media for refusing to sing the national anthem before their opening match.


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4 min read

Published

Updated

By Cameron Carr

Source: SBS News



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