Iran squad get cheerful Tijuana send off ahead of World Cup opener in Los Angeles

  • Summary
TIJUANA, Mexico, June 14 (Reuters) – Iran’s national soccer squad left their Tijuana base ‌camp to a rousing sendoff on Sunday, with supporters lining five-deep on a packed sidewalk outside their hotel on the eve of their World Cup opener against New Zealand in Los Angeles.
Fans, pressed against green wire fencing, chanted “Team Melli” — Persian for “national team” — as ​the players emerged from the hotel and walked towards the waiting bus.
Staff in red Iran shirts ​had distributed small Iranian flags through the fencing to the assembled crowds, and they waved ⁠them furiously when the team emerged.
Many of the players, dressed smartly in navy blue polo shirts and beige trousers, waved and smiled ​at those who had gathered while some members of the delegation took video of the scene with their phones.
One ​supporter held a yellow sign with black lettering reading “Iran, you will never walk alone. Mexico stands with you.”
A young boy perched on someone’s shoulders clutched the official Panini FIFA World Cup 2026 sticker album, open to the Iran squad page.
At one point, the ​crowd sang in Spanish, “Iran, brother, you are Mexican now.”
Iranian soccer federation President Mehdi Taj stood outside the hotel ​as the players left with many of the supporters following the bus down the street as it drove away.
The Iranian community ‌in ⁠Tijuana is tiny – around 20 people – and much smaller than that of Los Angeles, which is home to the largest Iranian community outside Iran.
Tens of thousands of Iranian-Americans live in LA, where a distinct diaspora often referred to as “Tehrangeles” has taken root.
Coach Amir Ghalenoei and striker Mehdi Taremi are scheduled to take part in a press conference at Los ​Angeles Stadium at 6:45 ​p.m. ET (2245 GMT).
Members of ⁠the Iranian-American community have planned to gather near Los Angeles Stadium later on Sunday to protest what they called the Iranian government’s ongoing human rights abuses.
Iran moved their ​World Cup base camp from a sports complex in Arizona to Mexico late last ​month after the ⁠U.S. and Israel conducted joint strikes on Iran beginning in late February.
This is the first World Cup since its inception in 1930 in which a host nation is set to receive a country it is at war with.
Monday’s Group ⁠G fixture ​against New Zealand at Los Angeles Stadium will be played against ​the backdrop of the U.S. war with Iran, adding a charged atmosphere to a contest between two nations that have never met at the World ​Cup.

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