Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 15
Many Iranians Shrug Off World Cup After 1 Year of War, Protests and Economic Pain
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 15

Many Iranians Shrug Off World Cup After 1 Year of War, Protests and Economic Pain

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 15

Summary

  • Interviews across Iran found broad indifference to the national team’s World Cup appearance, with many people saying the tournament offers little pride, relief or unity.
  • 1 year of devastating wars, crushed mass protests and an imploding economy has left many Iranians exhausted and jaded, overshadowing even the country’s biggest sporting stage.
  • Some Iranians now see the team as tied to a repressive state, while others still back the players as a source of national pride separate from politics.
  • Even supporters said daily pressures dominate public attention, underscoring how deeply conflict and economic hardship have eroded soccer’s usual unifying role.

Insights

As Iran's crises deepen, could an unexpected World Cup victory actually reunite a deeply fractured and exhausted nation?
With a US peace deal signed this week, can Iran’s economy recover under its new hardline supreme leader?
The new US-Iran agreement has a 60-day nuclear deadline. Is this a path to peace or just delaying a much larger conflict?