
VAR Denies Iran Late Winner as Egypt Advance to Last 32
A stoppage-time goal by Shoja Khalilzadeh was ruled offside after review, leaving Iran to wait on other results while Egypt secured a historic knockout berth.
The roar that erupted from the Iranian bench and the thousands of their supporters in Seattle’s Lumen Field was silenced by the thin line of an offside flag. In the third minute of added time, defender Shoja Khalilzadeh bundled the ball home amid a frantic goalmouth scramble, seemingly sending Iran into the World Cup’s round of 32 for the first time. After a lengthy VAR check, the goal was disallowed, and a 1-1 draw with Egypt left Team Melli’s fate dependent on the final group-stage matches elsewhere.
Egypt had already secured qualification before kick-off thanks to results in other groups, but they began as if their own progress was at stake. In the fifth minute, a Mohamed Salah shot was parried by goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand, and Mahmoud Saber pounced to slot the loose ball through the keeper’s legs. Iran responded with urgency: Mehdi Taremi won a penalty in the ninth minute after a foul by Mohamed Abdelmonem, but his low spot-kick was brilliantly saved by Mostafa Shobeir. The reprieve was brief. Four minutes later, Milad Mohammadi’s angled drive was pushed away by Shobeir, and Ramin Rezaeian, alert at the far post, smashed the rebound into the roof of the net from the tightest of angles.
The second half was a cagey affair, with Egypt content to manage the game and Iran probing for a winner that would guarantee their passage. Taremi headed against the crossbar from a corner, and Saeid Ezatolahi nodded against the woodwork deep in stoppage time. Then came Khalilzadeh’s disallowed effort, the offside detected not at the moment of his shot but when the initial effort was struck, with Shobeir having advanced off his line leaving only one defender between the Iranian and the goal. The final whistle confirmed Egypt as Group G runners-up behind Belgium, who thrashed New Zealand 5-1, and set up a last-32 meeting with Australia in Dallas on 3 July.
For Iran, the wait is agonising. Three draws from three matches leave them on three points, currently among the eight best third-placed teams but vulnerable to being overtaken by Croatia, Algeria or DR Congo in the final round of group fixtures. The squad’s campaign has been played out against a backdrop of logistical strain: based in Tijuana, Mexico, they were permitted to enter the United States only two days before the Egypt match and were required to leave the same day, under the terms of their visas. Inside the stadium, the match was designated a “Pride Match” by local organisers, and some Iranian fans waved pre-revolutionary flags and booed the national anthem, though the game passed without incident.
Egypt’s coach Hossam Hassan praised his players’ mentality after they withstood late pressure, while captain Salah was substituted in the 57th minute with ice applied to his left thigh, a concern ahead of the knockout phase. The Pharaohs’ first-ever progression beyond the group stage was already assured, but the manner of its confirmation—clinging on as VAR intervened—will be remembered as a moment of high drama that left one nation celebrating and another suspended in uncertainty.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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The match was a direct battle for a place in the round of 32. Egypt, needing only a draw, took the lead through Saber, while Iran missed a penalty through Taremi. The 1-1 draw sent the Pharaohs through and left Iran waiting on the other group result.
In a match overshadowed by the local authorities' decision to designate it as LGBTI+ pride day, Egypt and Iran played out a tense draw amid controversy. Taremi's missed penalty was the pivotal moment, with the geopolitical backdrop of US-Iran tensions adding another layer. Egypt advanced, but the off-field polemics dominated the conversation.
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