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SportSunday, June 28, 2026

A 96th-minute header sends Austria through and ends Iran's unbeaten World Cup

A staggering stoppage-time equaliser by Sasa Kalajdzic secured a 3-3 draw for Austria against Algeria, propelling both into the last 32 while Iran's campaign, shaped by diplomatic friction, expired in heartbreak.

Sasa Kalajdzic’s header, powered into the Kansas City net with almost the final act of a chaotic group-stage finale, altered the geometry of the tournament in an instant. The Austrian substitute met a floated cross in the ninth minute of stoppage time to level the match at 3-3, snatching a place in the knockout phase from the edge of elimination and, simultaneously, extinguishing Iran’s hopes of a historic first appearance in the round of 32.

The six-goal thriller between Austria and Algeria had already appeared to settle into a mutually convenient 2-2 draw when Riyad Mahrez, the Algerian captain, struck in the 93rd minute. His second goal of the night, finished with precision after a threaded pass from Houssem Aouar, seemed to have decided the contest—and, for a fleeting spell, rescued Iran. The Iranians, watching from afar, momentarily rose into the frame as one of the tournament’s best third-placed teams, only for Kalajdzic to rise above the Algerian defence and consign them to departure. Mahrez had earlier cancelled out Marcel Sabitzer’s thunderous strike for Austria, which itself had answered Rafik Belghali’s first-half equaliser after Marko Arnautovic’s opener. The see-sawing scoreline reflected a match that veered between caution and chaos, neither side able to fully control the other, though both aware that a point would be enough for progress.

Iran’s campaign ended without defeat—three draws in Group G, including a 1-1 with Egypt in which a stoppage-time winner was ruled out for offside—but the tiebreaker mathematics left them agonisingly short. The team’s journey had been shaped as much by logistics as by football. Compelled by diplomatic tensions between Tehran and Washington, Iranian players and staff were forced to commute from a base in Mexico for their matches in the United States, entering the host country only within 24 hours of kick-off and departing immediately afterward. Captain Mehdi Taremi described the restrictions as a “disaster”, while coach Amir Ghalenoei complained of being “oppressed”, underlining the extraordinary circumstances that surrounded a group-stage exit decided by seconds.

The outcome sent Austria into a meeting with European champions Spain in Los Angeles, their first knockout tie since 1982, and dispatched Algeria to a potentially softer contest against Switzerland in Vancouver. For Iran, the wait to extend a World Cup stay beyond the group phase goes on, the cruel final twists of Kansas City erasing their unbeaten record from the tournament’s narrative.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

41%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Arab Gulf pressLatin American press
Arab Gulf press
PragmatismDetachment

A dramatic late equalizer ensured both Austria and Algeria advanced to the knockout stage after a 3-3 draw, while Iran's elimination was confirmed. The group finale delivered high-paced action and stoppage-time twists.

Latin American press
TriumphUrgency

An agonizing 96th-minute header rescued Austria against Algeria in a 3-3 thriller, propelling both teams to the Round of 32. The draw sets up Austria's clash with Spain, while Algeria will take on Switzerland.

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Upd. 10:09 AM1 language · 4 outlets
4 outlets|1 language|2 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

A 96th-minute header sends Austria through and ends Iran's unbeaten World Cup

A staggering stoppage-time equaliser by Sasa Kalajdzic secured a 3-3 draw for Austria against Algeria, propelling both into the last 32 while Iran's campaign, shaped by diplomatic friction, expired in heartbreak.

Sasa Kalajdzic’s header, powered into the Kansas City net with almost the final act of a chaotic group-stage finale, altered the geometry of the tournament in an instant. The Austrian substitute met a floated cross in the ninth minute of stoppage time to level the match at 3-3, snatching a place in the knockout phase from the edge of elimination and, simultaneously, extinguishing Iran’s hopes of a historic first appearance in the round of 32.

The six-goal thriller between Austria and Algeria had already appeared to settle into a mutually convenient 2-2 draw when Riyad Mahrez, the Algerian captain, struck in the 93rd minute. His second goal of the night, finished with precision after a threaded pass from Houssem Aouar, seemed to have decided the contest—and, for a fleeting spell, rescued Iran. The Iranians, watching from afar, momentarily rose into the frame as one of the tournament’s best third-placed teams, only for Kalajdzic to rise above the Algerian defence and consign them to departure. Mahrez had earlier cancelled out Marcel Sabitzer’s thunderous strike for Austria, which itself had answered Rafik Belghali’s first-half equaliser after Marko Arnautovic’s opener. The see-sawing scoreline reflected a match that veered between caution and chaos, neither side able to fully control the other, though both aware that a point would be enough for progress.

Iran’s campaign ended without defeat—three draws in Group G, including a 1-1 with Egypt in which a stoppage-time winner was ruled out for offside—but the tiebreaker mathematics left them agonisingly short. The team’s journey had been shaped as much by logistics as by football. Compelled by diplomatic tensions between Tehran and Washington, Iranian players and staff were forced to commute from a base in Mexico for their matches in the United States, entering the host country only within 24 hours of kick-off and departing immediately afterward. Captain Mehdi Taremi described the restrictions as a “disaster”, while coach Amir Ghalenoei complained of being “oppressed”, underlining the extraordinary circumstances that surrounded a group-stage exit decided by seconds.

The outcome sent Austria into a meeting with European champions Spain in Los Angeles, their first knockout tie since 1982, and dispatched Algeria to a potentially softer contest against Switzerland in Vancouver. For Iran, the wait to extend a World Cup stay beyond the group phase goes on, the cruel final twists of Kansas City erasing their unbeaten record from the tournament’s narrative.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 1 language

41%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable71%
Neutral29%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Arab Gulf pressLatin American press
Arab Gulf press
PragmatismDetachment

A dramatic late equalizer ensured both Austria and Algeria advanced to the knockout stage after a 3-3 draw, while Iran's elimination was confirmed. The group finale delivered high-paced action and stoppage-time twists.

Latin American press
TriumphUrgency

An agonizing 96th-minute header rescued Austria against Algeria in a 3-3 thriller, propelling both teams to the Round of 32. The draw sets up Austria's clash with Spain, while Algeria will take on Switzerland.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 1 language

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