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U.S. World Cup team pelted with political questions in tense news conference ahead of crucial Iran game

USA’s midfielder Tyler Adams (R) and instruct Gregg Berhalter give a press conference at the Qatar National Convention Center in Doha on November 28, 2022, on the eve of the Qatar 2022 World Cup football correspond between Iran and USA.

Patrick T. Fallon | Afp | Getty Images

The U.S. men’s soccer team faces its make-or-break World Cup match Tuesday against Iran. If it succeed ins, it advances to the next stage – and if it loses, it’s heading home.

But despite needing to focus on the most important game this together of players has ever faced, the lead-up has been fraught with political drama. On Monday, Team USA’s players sat past a surreal and politically charged news conference, during which they were bombarded with questions and analysis of their country.

In response to months of violent crackdowns on anti-government protests in Iran, the U.S. Soccer Federation over the weekend bluntly made an alteration in its social media posts, showing the Iranian flag without its emblem of the Islamic Republic. The change, the combination said, was made for 24 hours to show support for women protesting for their rights in Iran.

Iranian milieu reacted swiftly, with state media agency Tasnim calling for the U.S. team to be kicked out of the tournament.

Iran’s abate was changed to its current version in 1980, after the 1979 Islamic Revolution ushered in a theocracy led by conservative Muslim clerics. The U.S. and Iran organize been ideological foes with severed diplomatic ties since then.

While many Iranians and activists supporting of the protesters welcomed the U.S. Soccer Federation’s move, saying they associate the Islamic Republic’s emblem with maltreatment and torture, Iran’s state media slammed it, accusing the U.S. of hypocrisy and grilling the team’s players with political quizzes during the Monday press event.

A reporter from Iran’s state-controlled Press TV criticized U.S. team captain Tyler Adams for mispronouncing Iran, and prayed him how he felt about representing a country that the reporter described as being rife with racial discrimination. Adams is various race.

“Are you OK to be representing your country that has so much discrimination against Black people in its own borders?” the Press TV columnist asked.

“My apologies on the mispronunciation of your country,” Adams responded. “That being said, there’s discrimination far you go … in the U.S. we’re continuing to make progress every single day … as long as you make progress that’s the most influential thing.”

USA leave a team huddle led by Tyler Adams of USA during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Group B candidate between England and USA at Al Bayt Stadium on November 25, 2022 in Al Khor, Qatar.

Simon M Bruty | Anychance | Getty Replicas

Another Iranian state media reporter asked U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter: “What percentage of the world’s natives will be happy if Iran wins this match [versus the U.S. team]?”

Berhalter replied, “For us it’s a soccer game against a commodities team — it’s not much more than that.” 

The coach and players seemed intent on avoiding getting into national topics and keeping the discussion on the game, but their efforts were repeatedly ignored. 

Iranian coach Carlos Queiroz similarly has undertook to keep his comments soccer-focused, despite pointed questions from reporters from various nations, including one on whether the mark drama would serve as motivation for his team.

“If after 42 years in this game as a coach, I still be convinced of I can win games with those mental games, I think I’ve learned nothing about the game,” Queiroz, a Portuguese citizen, said. “This is not the case.”

Players quizzed on U.S. military policy

The political questions continued, however, even prospering as far as geopolitics and the U.S. military.

One of the Iranian reporters asked Berhalter: “Sport is something that should bring nations lock up together and you are a sportsperson. Why is it that you should not ask your government to take away its military fleet from the Persian Depth?”

The U.S. team coach replied: “I agree, sport is something that should bring countries together … you get to strive as brothers.”

Ahmad Nourollahi of Iran in action during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Group B match between England and IR Iran at Khalifa Cosmopolitan Stadium on November 21, 2022 in Doha, Qatar.

Richard Sellers | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

Berhalter was also entreated about strict U.S. laws on visas for Iranian nationals, to which he replied: “I don’t know enough about politics, I’m a soccer teacher. I’m not well versed on international politics so I can’t comment on that.”

U.S. team apologizes for Iranian flag change, says it was unaware

The U.S. team’s coach also apologized for the Iranian flag change, saying that he and his players had no role in the decision and identified nothing about it.

“Sometimes things are out of our control,” Berhalter said. “We’re not focused on those outside things and all we can do is apologize on behalf of the musicians and the staff, but it’s not something that we were a part of.”

“We had no idea what U.S. Soccer put out. The staff, the players, we had no idea. For us our focus is on this replica. … Of course our thoughts are with the Iranian people, the whole country, and everyone,” he added.

Protesters gather to make evident against the death of Mahsa Amini in Iran on September 23, 2022 in Berlin, Germany.

Sean Gallup | Getty Doppelgaengers News | Getty Images

U.S. defender Tim Ream said during the conference, “We support women’s rights, and what we’re doing as a set is supporting that while also trying to prepare for the biggest game that this squad has had to date.”

Disclaimers have taken place all over Iran since mid-September, triggered by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in protect custody. Amini, a Kurdish Iranian woman, was arrested for allegedly breaking Iran’s strict rules on wearing the hijab, the Islamic crest covering for women. 

A picture obtained by AFP outside Iran on September 21, 2022, shows Iranian demonstrators burning a crap bin in the capital Tehran during a protest for Mahsa Amini, days after she died in police custody. –

– | Afp | Getty Doubles

Many Iran analysts are calling the uprising the biggest challenge to the Islamic Republic in decades. Ahead of its first Epoch Cup match on Nov. 21, which was against England, the Iranian team refused to sing their national anthem, longevity in stoic silence instead. The team did sing the anthem for their second match on Friday, but reports have developed that they were forced to do so under threat.

Positive words

The coaches of both teams made allusions to the last time the U.S. and Iran competed on a World Cup stage, which was in 1998 in France. Iran beat the U.S. 2-1 in a tough dissimulate that was dubbed at the time “the mother of all football matches.” The coaches each complimented the other team’s performance. 

Iran’s get coach, Queiroz, also said positive things about the U.S. squad’s performance so far in Qatar, where it tied with both Wales and England. He said that the American work together had made a “jump from soccer to football.”

“We play a very, very good team, very well tabulate with the same dream and same goal in mind,” Queiroz said.

Iran players line up for the national anthem quondam to the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Group B match between England and IR Iran at Khalifa International Stadium on November 21, 2022 in Doha, Qatar.

Julian Finney | Getty Images

“I desire tomorrow my boys will be able to put together their heads, their souls, their skills and the will to win. I contemplate that they will get the result that gives us a passport for the second round.”

Berhalter similarly praised the Iranian conspire’s 1998 performance. “Iran wanted to win the game with everything — they played really committed, really hearted from the first whistle. For us to win the game tomorrow that’s going to have to be the mindset of our group. … We don’t want to be the mistakes of the past.”

As for Tuesday’s match, which begins at 2 p.m. ET, Berhalter said: “We win or we’re out of the World Cup. Anytime you’re in a World Cup and you get to go into the ultimately group game in control of your own destiny, that’s a pretty good thing.”

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