Sign in
Edition of 06:00 CETSunday, June 28, 2026
307 outlets · 17 languages277 briefings today
SportSaturday, June 27, 2026

Late VAR Drama Denies Iran as Egypt Advance to World Cup Knockouts for First Time

A stoppage-time goal ruled out for offside leaves Iran's fate in the balance while Egypt celebrate a historic last-32 berth after a 1-1 draw in Seattle.

Iran’s World Cup hopes were suspended in agonising fashion at Lumen Field on Saturday, when a 93rd‑minute winner by Shoja Khalilzadeh was disallowed for offside after a video review, preserving a 1‑1 draw with Egypt and leaving Team Melli dependent on results elsewhere to reach the knockout rounds. The defender had turned in a loose ball during a frantic goalmouth scramble, sparking wild celebrations and a pitch invasion by the Iranian bench, but the VAR check showed he was fractionally ahead of the last Egyptian defender when the initial shot was struck. Moments later, Saeid Ezatolahi headed against the crossbar, compounding the sense of a reprieve for Egypt, who had already secured their first ever progression from a World Cup group stage before kick‑off.

The match had ignited early. Egypt struck in the fifth minute when Mahmoud Saber pounced on a fumbled save by Alireza Beiranvand, the goalkeeper’s weak parry from a Mohamed Salah effort slipping through his legs. Iran responded immediately: a penalty won by Mehdi Taremi in the ninth minute was saved by Mostafa Shobeir, diving low to his right, but the equaliser arrived five minutes later. Milad Mohammadi’s fierce drive was parried, and Ramin Rezaeian, alert at the far post, smashed the rebound into the roof of the net from the tightest of angles. The breathless opening then gave way to a scrappy, physical contest, with both sides trading half‑chances but lacking the precision to break the deadlock.

Egypt, already assured of a last‑32 place after results in Group H, played with the composure of a side whose primary objective was met, yet they were jolted when Salah was substituted in the 57th minute, the captain appearing to feel discomfort in his left leg. His departure blunted the Pharaohs’ attack, and Iran, sensing opportunity, grew increasingly assertive. Taremi headed against the bar from a corner in the closing minutes, and the disallowed goal capped a finale that, viewed from Tehran, will be remembered as a cruel twist. Egyptian media described the outcome as “fortunate,” while Iranian outlets lamented the VAR intervention and a missed penalty that could have altered the group’s arithmetic.

The draw left Egypt second in Group G on five points, behind Belgium on goal difference after the Red Devils thrashed New Zealand 5‑1. Iran finished third with three points, having drawn all three group matches, and must now wait for the conclusion of Groups E, F, I and J to learn whether they advance as one of the eight best third‑placed teams. Their campaign has been played out against a backdrop of logistical strain: the squad was forced to base itself in Tijuana, Mexico, and enter the United States only on matchdays under restrictive visa terms, a situation that drew comment from analysts in Europe and the Middle East. Egypt will face Australia in Dallas on 3 July, while Iran’s immediate future hinges on the outcomes of fixtures involving Croatia, Algeria and DR Congo.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

15%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Arab Gulf pressIranian & allied press
Arab Gulf press
TriumphPragmatism

Egypt made history by reaching the World Cup knockout stage for the first time after a 1-1 draw with Iran. The Pharaohs finished second in Group G, while Iran must wait to see if they advance as one of the best third-placed teams. The match was dramatic, with a late Iranian goal disallowed for offside.

Iranian & allied press/ Regime
SkepticismDetachment

Iran were held to a third consecutive draw, this time 1-1 with Egypt, leaving their knockout stage hopes dependent on other results. A missed penalty and a disallowed late goal added to the frustration. Egypt, already assured of progress, took an early lead but Iran equalized and now face an anxious wait.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
Argentina Maintain Perfect Record as Messi Adds Another Free-Kick Goal·From Pantry to Premature Ward: The Quiet Renaissance of Simple Solutions·DR Congo rally past Uzbekistan to set up historic England tie·England Frustrated at Half-Time as Croatia Seize Group L Initiative·Israel and Lebanon Sign US-Brokered Framework, Withdrawal Hinges on Hezbollah Disarmament·Bielsa Declares He Left ‘Nothing’ as Uruguay Crash Out of World Cup Group Stage·Science Upends Assumptions About Emotional Independence in Humans and Animals·Egypt’s historic knockout debut clouded by Salah hamstring strain·Argentina Maintain Perfect Record as Messi Adds Another Free-Kick Goal·From Pantry to Premature Ward: The Quiet Renaissance of Simple Solutions·DR Congo rally past Uzbekistan to set up historic England tie·England Frustrated at Half-Time as Croatia Seize Group L Initiative·Israel and Lebanon Sign US-Brokered Framework, Withdrawal Hinges on Hezbollah Disarmament·Bielsa Declares He Left ‘Nothing’ as Uruguay Crash Out of World Cup Group Stage·Science Upends Assumptions About Emotional Independence in Humans and Animals·Egypt’s historic knockout debut clouded by Salah hamstring strain·
Upd. 02:00 PM1 language · 2 outlets
2 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Saturday, June 27, 2026

Late VAR Drama Denies Iran as Egypt Advance to World Cup Knockouts for First Time

A stoppage-time goal ruled out for offside leaves Iran's fate in the balance while Egypt celebrate a historic last-32 berth after a 1-1 draw in Seattle.

Iran’s World Cup hopes were suspended in agonising fashion at Lumen Field on Saturday, when a 93rd‑minute winner by Shoja Khalilzadeh was disallowed for offside after a video review, preserving a 1‑1 draw with Egypt and leaving Team Melli dependent on results elsewhere to reach the knockout rounds. The defender had turned in a loose ball during a frantic goalmouth scramble, sparking wild celebrations and a pitch invasion by the Iranian bench, but the VAR check showed he was fractionally ahead of the last Egyptian defender when the initial shot was struck. Moments later, Saeid Ezatolahi headed against the crossbar, compounding the sense of a reprieve for Egypt, who had already secured their first ever progression from a World Cup group stage before kick‑off.

The match had ignited early. Egypt struck in the fifth minute when Mahmoud Saber pounced on a fumbled save by Alireza Beiranvand, the goalkeeper’s weak parry from a Mohamed Salah effort slipping through his legs. Iran responded immediately: a penalty won by Mehdi Taremi in the ninth minute was saved by Mostafa Shobeir, diving low to his right, but the equaliser arrived five minutes later. Milad Mohammadi’s fierce drive was parried, and Ramin Rezaeian, alert at the far post, smashed the rebound into the roof of the net from the tightest of angles. The breathless opening then gave way to a scrappy, physical contest, with both sides trading half‑chances but lacking the precision to break the deadlock.

Egypt, already assured of a last‑32 place after results in Group H, played with the composure of a side whose primary objective was met, yet they were jolted when Salah was substituted in the 57th minute, the captain appearing to feel discomfort in his left leg. His departure blunted the Pharaohs’ attack, and Iran, sensing opportunity, grew increasingly assertive. Taremi headed against the bar from a corner in the closing minutes, and the disallowed goal capped a finale that, viewed from Tehran, will be remembered as a cruel twist. Egyptian media described the outcome as “fortunate,” while Iranian outlets lamented the VAR intervention and a missed penalty that could have altered the group’s arithmetic.

The draw left Egypt second in Group G on five points, behind Belgium on goal difference after the Red Devils thrashed New Zealand 5‑1. Iran finished third with three points, having drawn all three group matches, and must now wait for the conclusion of Groups E, F, I and J to learn whether they advance as one of the eight best third‑placed teams. Their campaign has been played out against a backdrop of logistical strain: the squad was forced to base itself in Tijuana, Mexico, and enter the United States only on matchdays under restrictive visa terms, a situation that drew comment from analysts in Europe and the Middle East. Egypt will face Australia in Dallas on 3 July, while Iran’s immediate future hinges on the outcomes of fixtures involving Croatia, Algeria and DR Congo.

Source divergence

Sport · 2 outlets · 1 language

15%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable92%
Critical8%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Arab Gulf pressIranian & allied press
Arab Gulf press
TriumphPragmatism

Egypt made history by reaching the World Cup knockout stage for the first time after a 1-1 draw with Iran. The Pharaohs finished second in Group G, while Iran must wait to see if they advance as one of the best third-placed teams. The match was dramatic, with a late Iranian goal disallowed for offside.

Iranian & allied press/ Regime
SkepticismDetachment

Iran were held to a third consecutive draw, this time 1-1 with Egypt, leaving their knockout stage hopes dependent on other results. A missed penalty and a disallowed late goal added to the frustration. Egypt, already assured of progress, took an early lead but Iran equalized and now face an anxious wait.

This story appeared in

2 outlets · 1 language

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

US Strikes Iran for Second Day After Tanker Hit, Trump Threatens to 'Complete the Job'

8 languages · 37 outlets

From Economy & Markets

Dollar surges on US exceptionalism as eurozone inflation expectations ease

3 languages · 6 outlets

From Technology

Android’s Seismic Network Alerts Millions in Venezuela, Reigniting Data Privacy Debate

4 languages · 6 outlets

Read more