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Updated Jun 17, 2026 · 07:06
Sports World News Updated Jun 17, 2026

Iran Winger Torabi's US Visa Expires After World Cup Opener

Iran winger Mehdi Torabi's US visa expired after a single entry for the team's World Cup opener in Los Angeles. The Iran Football Federation is taking action to obtain a new visa for Torabi to continue accompanying the national team. Iran is commuting from their base in Tijuana, Mexico for their group-stage matches in Los Angeles and Seattle. The team drew 2-2 with New Zealand in their opening Group G match.

Iran winger Mehdi Torabi's US visa expires after FIFA World Cup opener

Tehran, June 17

The Iran Football Federation stated on Tuesday that their winger Mehdi Torabi's visa had expired following a single visit to the United States for the team's FIFA World Cup 2026 opener in Los Angeles.

"While multiple-entry visas were issued for the team's players to travel to the United States, Mehdi Torabi's visa was valid for only one entry," an FFIRI spokesman said, as quoted by Reuters.

"Following the team's trip to Los Angeles for the match against New Zealand and the completion of that game, his visa has now expired. The Iran Football Federation has taken action to obtain a new visa for Torabi so that he can continue to accompany the national team in its upcoming matches."

As per Reuters, Iran is commuting from their tournament base in the Mexican border city of Tijuana for their three World Cup group-stage matches, the first two in Los Angeles and the third in Seattle.

Iran and New Zealand played out an entertaining 2-2 draw in their World Cup opener at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. New Zealand took an early lead through Elijah Just, but Iran equalised via Ramin Rezaeian before half-time.

New Zealand regained the advantage in the second half through Just's second goal, set up by Chris Wood, but Iran responded again with Mohammad Mohebbi's header to level the score as both teams ultimately shared the points in a tightly contested Group G encounter.

Iran arrived at the World Cup amid ongoing geopolitical tensions with the United States and Israel. Iran had even shifted their World Cup base camp from Arizona to the Mexican city of Tijuana following uncertainty surrounding entry arrangements to the United States.

The move came after weeks of concern over whether members of the Iranian delegation would receive the necessary visas to travel for the tournament.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Kavya N

Honestly, with all the geopolitical tension between Iran and the US, it's surprising anyone from the team got visas at all. Considering the circumstances, one player having a single-entry visa is actually not that bad. But the federation should have caught this earlier. Yaar, so much on the line for Torabi!

Stephanie T

This is such a mess. The Iran team moved their base camp from Arizona to Tijuana because of visa uncertainty, and now one of their key wingers can't even re-enter the US. The World Cup is supposed to unite people, not create administrative nightmares. I hope they sort this out quickly for Torabi's sake.

Rajesh Q

As an Indian, I totally understand this visa hassle! We face similar issues traveling to many countries. But for a World Cup, the US should have facilitated smoother entry for all team members. This is just plain embarrassing for the host nation. 😒

Ryan S

It's a bit ironic that the World Cup is supposed to be about sportsmanship and unity, yet here we are with players being denied entry based on their nationality. The US really needs to streamline its visa process for such events. Hope Torabi gets his new visa in time.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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