
Austria and Algeria’s 3-3 thriller sends both through as Iran falls
A frantic finish in Kansas City saw both teams advance after a match marked by suspicion and six goals, while Iran’s hopes were dashed.
The final whistle at Arrowhead Stadium sealed a 3-3 draw that sent Austria and Algeria into the round of 32 and eliminated Iran from the 2026 World Cup, but it was the 96th-minute equaliser from substitute Saša Kalajdžić that delivered the tournament’s most frantic denouement. Austria, twice ahead through Marco Arnautović and Marcel Sabitzer, were pegged back by Rafik Belghali and Riyad Mahrez, and when Mahrez appeared to have snatched victory for Algeria in the 93rd minute, Iran’s bench erupted. Yet Kalajdžić’s last-gasp strike, almost the final touch of the match, restored parity, rescued Austria from a shock exit, and simultaneously extinguished Iran’s qualification hopes.
Both teams had entered the game knowing a draw would suffice. Austria would finish second in Group J behind Argentina, and Algeria would advance as one of the eight best third‑placed sides. A draw eliminated Iran, who were ninth in that ranking with three points and a zero goal difference. The arithmetic loomed over the match from the start, but the opening hour produced genuinely competitive football: Arnautović’s clever finish, Belghali’s driven equaliser, Sabitzer’s blast, and Mahrez’s first goal of the tournament kept the scoreboard ticking. After the hour mark, however, the tempo dropped markedly as both sides settled into the 2-2 that suited their purposes, a phase punctuated by Algerian players circulating the ball in midfield and Austrian players stretching rather than pressing, drawing jeers from the crowd.
Ralf Rangnick, Austria’s 67-year‑old coach, forcefully rejected allegations of a pre‑arranged result. “In a match that finishes 3-3, no one can claim there was an agreement—especially after what we saw in the last 90 seconds,” he said, adding that he could not recall a game in his four‑decade career that had developed “so dramatically and unpredictably.” He insisted that both teams were chasing a winner until the final moments, and dismissed the idea that anyone could “suddenly plan at 93 minutes to score another goal.” Algeria’s Vladimir Petković also welcomed the outcome, saying “football won in the end,” a statement laden with history: the fixture had been overshadowed by memories of the 1982 “Disgrace of Gijón,” when West Germany and Austria conspired to eliminate Algeria with a mutually beneficial result.
Iranian state media and officials reacted with fury, accusing the teams of collusion and invoking the Gijón precedent, while a more analytical strand of commentary in Tehran invoked game theory to describe the match as a “tacit rational agreement” rather than a fix. Iran’s elimination was sealed not solely by this result but by earlier stumbles: a draw against New Zealand, a loss to Belgium, and a goalless draw with Egypt in which a late Shoja Khalilzadeh goal was disallowed for offside. Coach Amir Ghalenoei had pledged a campaign that would “shut down the country for a week,” but his side exited before the knockout phase.
Next, Austria face European champions Spain in California on 2 July, while Algeria meet Switzerland—Petković’s former team—in Vancouver the following day. Both will carry the bruising lesson of a match that, however chaotic, will be remembered less for suspicion than for its sheer, madcap theatre.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Iranian media decry a suspected collusion between Austria and Algeria to eliminate Iran, labeling the 3-3 draw a pre‑arranged 'biscotto'. Despite the Austrian coach's denials, outrage dominates, with Iran depicted as the victim of sporting injustice.
European continental outlets cover the match with detachment, reporting the wild 3-3 draw and Rangnick's firm denial of any fix. Both teams' progression is portrayed as a product of on‑field chaos, with skepticism toward conspiracy theories and a focus on the facts and official comments.
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