The 2026 FIFA World Cup has hit its highest attendance ever and generated the most goals scored in World Cup history.
Why Everyone Cares About This World Cup
For the first time in World Cup history, a team is playing a host nation it's actively at war with — and Iranian-American fans are booing their own anthem while cheering their own players.
The Daily
Why Everyone Cares About This World Cup
For the first time in World Cup history, a team is playing a host nation it's actively at war with — and Iranian-American fans are booing their own anthem while cheering their own players.
TL;DR
The 2026 FIFA World Cup, hosted across the US, Canada, and Mexico, has sparked an unexpected wave of cross-cultural joy — despite deep geopolitical tensions. Reporter Tarek Panja describes how international fans and American locals are embracing each other in small towns from Lawrence, Kansas to Boston [1] — Tarek Panja "The University of Kansas marching band learned the Algerian national anthem to welcome Team Algeria to Lawrence, Kansas. Local fans showed …" 06:23 . But the tournament's most complex story belongs to Iran, whose team is playing a host nation it is literally at war with [2] — Tarek Panja "Iran is playing World Cup matches in Los Angeles while in active military conflict with the United States. This is the first time in the to…" 15:05 . Daily producer Anna Foley profiles Iranian-American father and son Farhad and Kevin, whose love of soccer is inseparable from their divided loyalties — and who stood in silence as fans booed the Iranian national anthem [3] — Farhad "Farhad spent five years trying to get a US visa before the Iranian Revolution. One day he showed up at the embassy — the whole street was f…" 21:39 . The key takeaway: sport cannot escape politics, but it can hold contradictions with grace.
Reporter Tarek Panja explains the magic and complexity of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, including international fans embracing America and the unprecedented situation of Iran competing against a host nation it is at war with. Daily producer Anna Foley speaks with Iranian-American father and son Farhad and Kevin about their divided loyalties and what it means to cheer for Iran this year.
-
The episode opens with a sponsored message from the International Rescue Committee, drawing attention to the displacement crisis in Lebanon caused by ongoing violence. The ad emphasises that IRC staff are on the ground delivering critical supplies but need to scale up support quickly. All donations are being matched to provide double the emergency aid, with listeners directed to rescue.org/rebuild.
-
The episode opens with a montage of broadcast commentary — Lionel Messi scoring his first-ever World Cup hat-trick to tie the all-time goalscoring record, Erling Haaland announcing himself to the World Cup stage, and Kylian Mbappé conjuring magic for France. Host Natalie Kitroeff frames the scene: two weeks into the tournament, the 2026 World Cup has already shattered records for attendance and goals scored. But the biggest story, she notes, is happening off the field — in the streets, the restaurants, and the escalators of America.
-
A series of vox-pop clips capture the human texture of the World Cup's off-field story. International visitors gush about American beaches being 'just as good as Australian beaches' and debate the merits of ranch dressing. An American fan declares they can no longer believe negative things about America after meeting its people. It's a brief but telling preview of the cross-cultural joy that Tarek Panja will explain in full.
-
Natalie Kitroeff sets the stage for what follows: a two-part episode that captures both the joy and the difficulty of this World Cup. Tarek Panja, back on the show after previously predicting this cultural phenomenon, will explore how the tournament has unfolded despite deep geopolitical anxieties. Then Daily producer Anna Foley will bring us into a more intimate and politically fraught story — two fans of the Iranian national team grappling with what it means to cheer for their team when their country is at war with the host nation.
-
Tarek Panja returns to The Daily and immediately acknowledges the baggage this World Cup carried into kick-off. The United States — a country talking about building walls, reducing immigration, and sending people home — was asking the world to come to it. Getting visas proved difficult for many fans. There was the threat of ICE enforcement at stadiums. And right on the cusp of the opening match, a FIFA referee from Somalia who was scheduled to work the tournament was denied entry and sent back to Turkey — an ominous sign for anyone uncertain they'd be welcomed. Yet the tournament started, and something shifted.
-
One of Tarek Panja's favourite aspects of the expanded 48-team World Cup is where the teams end up: not in major cities, but in college towns and mid-sized cities that have never hosted anything like a global event. Spain is in Chattanooga — home to 'Lamine watching,' as locals follow the teenage superstar around a Walmart. Erling Haaland is in Greensboro. But the most heartwarming story belongs to Lawrence, Kansas, a University of Kansas college town, which prepared for Algeria's arrival by having its marching band learn the Algerian national anthem. Locals showed up in Algeria jerseys. A town that had never experienced anything remotely global suddenly found itself at the centre of the world.
-
With the teams settled in their base camps, the fans arrive — and what follows is a cascade of cross-cultural encounters that only the World Cup can generate. Norwegian supporters take over New York and New Jersey, performing their famous Viking rowing chant while gliding down a subway escalator. Dallas organises bus tours to various points of interest; the most popular destination, by far, is Buc-ee's — a gas station so vast and so American that visitors wander through it in total disbelief, with staff performing sing-songs at the counter. Meanwhile, foreign fans are enthusiastically sampling American cuisine: hot french fries dunked in a chocolate milkshake ('that shouldn't work, but it's actually really good'), Texas short ribs, Philly cheesesteaks. The Philly cheesesteak, Natalie Kitroeff solemnly declares, is 'a national delicacy.'
-
Scotland hadn't qualified for the World Cup since 1998 — 28 years of absence that the Tartan Army was determined to make up for all at once. They descended on Boston and turned the city into a 24/7 party, chanting 'Yankees suck' (the two words every Bostonian could teach them) and working through the city's beer supply at speed. The Bostonians, by all accounts, were delighted. The love affair was so intense that the Boston Globe dedicated a full newspaper page to thanking Scotland's fans for their visit. Tarek Panja explains that this culture of being 'loud, fun, and leaving people happy you were there' was deliberately constructed as an opposition to the hooliganism that surrounded English football and English fans in the '80s and '90s — a piece of history Natalie Kitroeff admits she had no idea about.
-
As the World Cup unfolds alongside America's 250th anniversary celebrations — many of which have become tied to and contentious around President Trump — Tarek Panja points to the tournament as a parallel, less divisive expression of American identity. This country is a patchwork of people, built on everybody, he says. The World Cup's entire diaspora dimension is proof. He meets Farouk, a Jordanian immigrant who moved to the US 46 years ago and is heading to Dallas to watch Jordan play Lionel Messi. Farouk beams about everything America gave him — opportunities, children, a life — then says quietly: 'Jordan, it's my love.' He calls watching Jordan play at the World Cup 'the proudest moment of my life.' You can have that duality, Tarek concludes. You don't have to lash yourself to one flag.
-
With the joy and the complexity both named, Tarek Panja turns to the tournament's most fraught story: Iran. This is the first time in World Cup history that a competing nation is in active military conflict with a host country. The Iranian diaspora in the US is not a monolith — some refuse to support the team entirely, calling it a propaganda tool of the Tehran government. But the majority, Panja says, are caught in the middle: they love the team, they love their country, and they are trying to find ways to support both while also opposing the regime. The result is visible in real time at every Iran match in Los Angeles. When the national anthem plays, it is met with widespread booing. Some fans turn their backs to the flag. Others wave pre-revolution flags in protest. Then the whistle blows — and it becomes a home game. What we are seeing, Tarek says, is nationalism, identity, patriotism, and a community working out who they are, all around an international soccer tournament.
-
Natalie Kitroeff wraps her conversation with Tarek Panja, and the episode pauses for a sponsor break. The transition signals a shift in register: from Tarek's reporter's-eye view of the World Cup's big picture to Anna Foley's on-the-ground portrait of two specific Iranian-American fans facing the tournament's complexity up close.
-
The mid-episode ad break features three sponsors. Planned Parenthood calls for donations after losing Medicaid funding under the Trump administration. Capital One promotes its Savor card's unlimited 3% cash back on dining and entertainment. Betterment explains its tax loss harvesting strategy — intentionally selling declining assets to offset taxable income.
-
Natalie Kitroeff sets up the personal story that will dominate the rest of the episode. Producer Anna Foley went to Los Angeles just hours before Iran's first 2026 World Cup game and sat down with a father and son — Farhad and Kevin — who are lifelong Iranian team fans. Their story, Kitroeff explains, is about the 'complex business of sorting out national pride and fandom — in the middle of war.'
-
Anna Foley begins with Farhad's story — a portrait of an immigrant's life built on a single improbable moment. Farhad had been trying to get a US visa for five years, with nothing working. Then, one day, he showed up at the embassy and found the entire street filled with thousands of people, each seeking the same paperwork. His chances seemed essentially zero. Then he heard his name called — no microphone, no speaker, just a man's voice somehow cutting through the crowd. The consular officer handed him his passport. He asked, in broken English, what it meant. 'You got visa,' the man said. He has replayed that moment every single day of the 47 years he has lived in America, settled in Ohio, got married, had children. He cannot logically explain it. He took it, he says, as an act of God.
-
The story shifts to Kevin, Farhad's son, who grew up in Ohio as an Iranian-American. His love of soccer began with an old VHS tape — '50 greatest World Cup goals' — that he and his father watched repeatedly together. One tape became boxes of taped matches stacked in the living room. Kevin started playing in a neighbourhood league; Farhad took him to meet American players like Brad Friedel and Brian McBride. Soccer became more than a sport — it became the primary thread connecting Kevin to his Iranian side and to his father. Their typical evening together, he says, is cooking Persian food and turning on a game. Farhad calls Kevin an 'encyclopedia of soccer,' capable of reciting what happened in specific games from when he was 11.
-
In 1998, Iran's national team was strong. Kevin and Farhad started following them closely, cutting out newspaper articles about their matches. Then one day Farhad sat his family down with big news: Iran had qualified for the World Cup. Kevin says it took him just two guesses to figure out what the announcement was, and it's a moment he will always remember. Iran then played — and beat — the United States 2-1 in what was the first-ever meeting between the two nations in World Cup play. For Kevin, it was the first time his two identities were pitted against each other in the sport he loved.
-
What started as Kevin getting tickets for himself to the 2022 Qatar World Cup quickly became something much larger when he realised he couldn't possibly go to a US-Iran game without his father. Kevin took charge of the heart of the trip — he suggested starting with Mecca, Farhad's lifelong dream — while Farhad took charge of the logistics with characteristic thoroughness: maps of all the stadiums, two backup copies of every itinerary, train times annotated and cross-referenced. The combination of a religious pilgrimage and a sporting pilgrimage struck Anna Foley as a beautiful symmetry, and Farhad agreed. At the game itself, the tension was different from Kevin's Ohio restaurant experience in 1998 — the crowd was louder, more partisan, full of people born and raised in Iran who never had to question which team they were cheering for.
-
Iran's 2026 World Cup group-stage games are in Los Angeles — practically next door to where Kevin and Farhad now live. But the context is radically different from any previous tournament. There is an actual war. There is nationalistic rhetoric and presidential statements that Kevin found 'troublesome' — Trump saying Iranian players could come but couldn't guarantee their safety. The US restricted player visas so severely that the Iranian squad was forced to stay in Tijuana and cross the border for just one day at a time. Kevin tries to separate the people from the politics, to cheer for the Iranian players as representatives of the Iranian people rather than the regime. But he acknowledges it is impossible to fully block out. He describes the feeling as 'standing over a ledge' — a huge, unresolved thing beneath him, full of unease and danger, with no clear resolution in sight.
-
Kevin and Farhad left for the stadium five hours early — Farhad the planner, not wanting to miss a second — and found their seats near a corner of the field. Before kick-off, a huge Iranian flag was unfurled and the national anthem played. The response from the Iranian diaspora crowd was striking: widespread booing and jeering, some fans turning their backs to the flag entirely, others waving pre-revolution flags in visible protest. Then the players ran onto the pitch, and it became a home game — roaring, passionate support. Kevin says he resonated with both reactions simultaneously. For many in that stadium, he explains, Iran means their childhood, the life they had before the revolution. The anthem represents something else entirely. They are drawing lines in the sand in real time, Anna Foley observes — and Kevin agrees.
-
Iran drew all of their group-stage matches and were eliminated from the 2026 World Cup without a win. Farhad was disappointed; he felt the real-world political repercussions had seeped into the team's campaign and made success impossible. Kevin, meanwhile, was excited — his other team, the US, was advancing. Before leaving Los Angeles, the Iranian players wrote a farewell message on the dressing room whiteboard: from ancient Persia to civilised Iran, the spirit remains alive. 'We came to Los Angeles with pride, competed with honor, and leave with dignity.' They thanked Los Angeles for its hospitality, and every Iranian who had given their voice and soul for 180 minutes. 'May peace, respect, and friendship prevail among all nations.' When Anna Foley read the note to Farhad and asked what he thought, he said: 'They wrote what I feel.'
-
A post-story sponsor break features American Beverage directing listeners to GoodToKnowFacts.org, a site designed to provide clear, spin-free information about ingredients in popular beverages. Bank of America Private Bank follows, positioning itself as the official bank of the FIFA World Cup 2026 and inviting high-net-worth listeners to explore bespoke wealth and business strategies.
-
The episode closes with Natalie Kitroeff's news briefing. On Iran: the US and Iran have reached an agreement to stop attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and allow free passage of ships, according to a US official — though Iran had not confirmed the deal as of Sunday night. This follows a series of escalating exchanges: the US accused Iran of striking an oil tanker, then carried out attacks on Iranian air defence sites; Iran retaliated with drone and missile strikes on a US naval base in Bahrain and an airbase in Kuwait, with no casualties reported. On Venezuela: the death toll from two earthquakes that struck earlier in the week has risen above 1,400, with thousands more injured. More than 430 aftershocks have followed, and rescue efforts in La Guaira, the worst-affected state, have been paralysed by civilian vehicles blocking roads and leaving aid workers stranded in traffic.
-
Natalie Kitroeff closes the episode by crediting the production team: produced by Anna Foley, Rachelle Bonja, Eric Krupke, and Diana Wynn; edited by Brendan Klinkenberg and Ben Calhoun; fact-checked by Susan Lee; music by Elisheba Ittoop, Sophia Landman, and others; engineered by Chris Wood. Theme music by Wonderly. She signs off with her customary sign-off: 'I'm Natalie Kitroeff. See you tomorrow.'
-
The episode ends with a second Bank of America Private Bank spot, this one focused on legacy and ambition — 'you're cut from a different cloth' — and directing listeners to privatebank.bankofamerica.com. The ad reiterates the bank's status as the official bank of the FIFA World Cup 2026, tying the closing sponsor message neatly back to the episode's central subject.
- Tartan Army
- The informal name for Scotland's travelling soccer fan base, known for their boisterous but good-natured support and deliberate opposition to the hooliganism that characterised English fan culture in the 1980s and '90s.
- Diaspora
- A population scattered from their original homeland, typically maintaining cultural or emotional ties to it; used here to describe Iranian, Jordanian, and other communities living in the US while supporting their home nations' World Cup teams.
- ICE
- US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the federal agency responsible for immigration law enforcement; fears about ICE operations at World Cup venues were a source of anxiety for international fans travelling to the US.
- FIFA
- Fédération Internationale de Football Association, the international governing body for soccer, which organises the World Cup.
- Base camp
- In World Cup terminology, the city or town where a national team stays and trains between matches, often in a smaller city rather than the main host cities.
- Tax loss harvesting
- An investment strategy where securities that have declined in value are intentionally sold to realise a loss, which can then be used to offset taxable income; mentioned in a sponsor segment by Betterment.
- Lamine Yamal
- A young Spanish soccer star described in the episode as the next global superstar after Messi and Ronaldo, whose team based themselves in Chattanooga, Tennessee for the 2026 World Cup.
- Hooliganism
- Violent or disruptive behaviour by sports fans, particularly associated with English soccer supporters in the 1980s and 1990s; cited as the cultural backdrop against which Scotland's peaceful fan culture was deliberately constructed.
- Pre-revolution flag
- The Iranian flag used before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, waved by diaspora fans in protest at World Cup games as a symbol of opposition to the current Iranian government.
- Ceasefire
- A temporary agreement between warring parties to halt hostilities; referenced in the episode in the context of ongoing US-Iran military conflict during the World Cup.
- Strait of Hormuz
- A strategically critical waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman through which a large share of global oil passes; the site of recent US-Iran military exchanges described in the episode's news segment.
- Antithetical
- Directly opposed or contrary; Tarek Panja used it to describe how America's inward-facing political posture under Trump is fundamentally at odds with the World Cup's spirit of global openness.
- Writ large
- On a larger or more conspicuous scale; used by Tarek Panja when describing how the internal divisions of Iranian politics are visible in miniature around the World Cup stadiums.
Chapter 2 · 00:29
Cold Open: A World Cup Already Full of Records
The episode opens with a montage of broadcast commentary — Lionel Messi scoring his first-ever World Cup hat-trick to tie the all-time goalscoring record, Erling Haaland announcing himself to the World Cup stage, and Kylian Mbappé conjuring magic for France. Host Natalie Kitroeff frames the scene: two weeks into the tournament, the 2026 World Cup has already shattered records for attendance and goals scored. But the biggest story, she notes, is happening off the field — in the streets, the restaurants, and the escalators of America.
Claims made here
The 2026 World Cup has hit its highest attendance ever and generated the most goals scored in World Cup history.
Chapter 4 · 02:13
Introduction and Today's Episode Setup
Natalie Kitroeff sets the stage for what follows: a two-part episode that captures both the joy and the difficulty of this World Cup. Tarek Panja, back on the show after previously predicting this cultural phenomenon, will explore how the tournament has unfolded despite deep geopolitical anxieties. Then Daily producer Anna Foley will bring us into a more intimate and politically fraught story — two fans of the Iranian national team grappling with what it means to cheer for their team when their country is at war with the host nation.
Despite deep fears about US immigration policy, ICE enforcement, and geopolitical tension, the 2026 World Cup started and quickly became a force for human connection. Tournament after tournament, it delivers a brief moment of global uplift that no one can manufacture.
Chapter 5 · 02:45
Tarek Panja on the Pre-Tournament Anxiety
Tarek Panja returns to The Daily and immediately acknowledges the baggage this World Cup carried into kick-off. The United States — a country talking about building walls, reducing immigration, and sending people home — was asking the world to come to it. Getting visas proved difficult for many fans. There was the threat of ICE enforcement at stadiums. And right on the cusp of the opening match, a FIFA referee from Somalia who was scheduled to work the tournament was denied entry and sent back to Turkey — an ominous sign for anyone uncertain they'd be welcomed. Yet the tournament started, and something shifted.
Claims made here
A FIFA referee from Somalia who was on the list to work at the 2026 World Cup was denied entry to the US and sent back to Turkey.
A FIFA referee from Somalia who was on the list to work the 2026 World Cup was turned back at the US border, sent back to Turkey.
Chapter 6 · 05:02
Teams in Small-Town America: Base Camps and Local Magic
One of Tarek Panja's favourite aspects of the expanded 48-team World Cup is where the teams end up: not in major cities, but in college towns and mid-sized cities that have never hosted anything like a global event. Spain is in Chattanooga — home to 'Lamine watching,' as locals follow the teenage superstar around a Walmart. Erling Haaland is in Greensboro. But the most heartwarming story belongs to Lawrence, Kansas, a University of Kansas college town, which prepared for Algeria's arrival by having its marching band learn the Algerian national anthem. Locals showed up in Algeria jerseys. A town that had never experienced anything remotely global suddenly found itself at the centre of the world.
Claims made here
The 2026 World Cup is the biggest ever, featuring 48 national teams.
Spain's Lamine Yamal, one of the most famous athletes on the planet, is based in Chattanooga, Tennessee for the tournament. There he is — walking into a Walmart. The World Cup has a way of turning ordinary American towns into improbable global stages.
The 2026 World Cup is the largest ever, featuring 48 national teams.
The University of Kansas marching band learned the Algerian national anthem to welcome Team Algeria to Lawrence, Kansas. Local fans showed up in Algeria jerseys. A college town that had never experienced anything like a global event suddenly became one.
Norwegian World Cup fans arrived in New York and New Jersey, performed their famous Viking rowing chant on a subway escalator, and then got bused by the city of Dallas to Buc-ee's — the giant American gas station that became an unlikely pilgrimage site. International fans encountering America at full volume is the essence of this World Cup.
Chapter 8 · 09:55
The Tartan Army Takes Boston
Scotland hadn't qualified for the World Cup since 1998 — 28 years of absence that the Tartan Army was determined to make up for all at once. They descended on Boston and turned the city into a 24/7 party, chanting 'Yankees suck' (the two words every Bostonian could teach them) and working through the city's beer supply at speed. The Bostonians, by all accounts, were delighted. The love affair was so intense that the Boston Globe dedicated a full newspaper page to thanking Scotland's fans for their visit. Tarek Panja explains that this culture of being 'loud, fun, and leaving people happy you were there' was deliberately constructed as an opposition to the hooliganism that surrounded English football and English fans in the '80s and '90s — a piece of history Natalie Kitroeff admits she had no idea about.
Claims made here
Scotland had not qualified for the World Cup since 1998, prior to 2026.
Scotland's positive fan culture was deliberately created as an opposition to the hooliganism around English football in the 1980s and 1990s.
Scotland hadn't qualified for the World Cup since 1998. Their fans, the Tartan Army, arrived in Boston and turned the city into a 24/7 party, drinking the city dry but leaving everyone happy. Their fan culture was deliberately built as an antidote to the football hooliganism of English fans in the '80s and '90s — and Boston loved them so much the Globe gave them a full front page.
Scotland had not qualified for the World Cup since 1998, making this their first appearance in 28 years.
Chapter 9 · 12:40
The Diaspora World Cup: Farouk and Being Two Things at Once
As the World Cup unfolds alongside America's 250th anniversary celebrations — many of which have become tied to and contentious around President Trump — Tarek Panja points to the tournament as a parallel, less divisive expression of American identity. This country is a patchwork of people, built on everybody, he says. The World Cup's entire diaspora dimension is proof. He meets Farouk, a Jordanian immigrant who moved to the US 46 years ago and is heading to Dallas to watch Jordan play Lionel Messi. Farouk beams about everything America gave him — opportunities, children, a life — then says quietly: 'Jordan, it's my love.' He calls watching Jordan play at the World Cup 'the proudest moment of my life.' You can have that duality, Tarek concludes. You don't have to lash yourself to one flag.
Tarek Panja met Farouk, a Jordanian immigrant who has lived in the US for 46 years and was heading to Dallas to watch Jordan play Lionel Messi. He beamed about what America gave him, then said 'Jordan is my love.' The World Cup is proving you don't have to lash yourself to one flag.
Chapter 10 · 15:05
Iran's Unprecedented Situation: War with the Host Nation
With the joy and the complexity both named, Tarek Panja turns to the tournament's most fraught story: Iran. This is the first time in World Cup history that a competing nation is in active military conflict with a host country. The Iranian diaspora in the US is not a monolith — some refuse to support the team entirely, calling it a propaganda tool of the Tehran government. But the majority, Panja says, are caught in the middle: they love the team, they love their country, and they are trying to find ways to support both while also opposing the regime. The result is visible in real time at every Iran match in Los Angeles. When the national anthem plays, it is met with widespread booing. Some fans turn their backs to the flag. Others wave pre-revolution flags in protest. Then the whistle blows — and it becomes a home game. What we are seeing, Tarek says, is nationalism, identity, patriotism, and a community working out who they are, all around an international soccer tournament.
Claims made here
The 2026 World Cup is the first time a participating team has been in active military conflict with a host nation.
Iran is playing World Cup matches in Los Angeles while in active military conflict with the United States. This is the first time in the tournament's history that a team has been in military conflict with a host nation. The Iranian players had to stay in Tijuana, restricted to entering the US for one day at a time.
When Iran's national anthem plays, there is widespread booing in the stadium. When the team takes the field, it becomes a home game. The Iranian community is publicly debating whether supporting the team means supporting the regime — and that internal struggle is visible on the players' faces.
Chapter 14 · 21:39
Farhad's Story: Five Years, a Miracle Visa, and 47 Years in America
Anna Foley begins with Farhad's story — a portrait of an immigrant's life built on a single improbable moment. Farhad had been trying to get a US visa for five years, with nothing working. Then, one day, he showed up at the embassy and found the entire street filled with thousands of people, each seeking the same paperwork. His chances seemed essentially zero. Then he heard his name called — no microphone, no speaker, just a man's voice somehow cutting through the crowd. The consular officer handed him his passport. He asked, in broken English, what it meant. 'You got visa,' the man said. He has replayed that moment every single day of the 47 years he has lived in America, settled in Ohio, got married, had children. He cannot logically explain it. He took it, he says, as an act of God.
Farhad spent five years trying to get a US visa before the Iranian Revolution. One day he showed up at the embassy — the whole street was filled with people. Then a consular officer called his name with no microphone, no speaker, just his voice. Farhad has replayed that moment every day of his 47 years in America.
Iranian-American fan Farhad came to the US from Iran 47 years ago, having spent two-thirds of his life in America.
Farhad spent five years trying unsuccessfully to get a US visa before finally receiving one in a chance encounter at the embassy.
Chapter 15 · 24:05
Kevin's Story: Soccer, Heritage, and the VHS Tape of Goals
The story shifts to Kevin, Farhad's son, who grew up in Ohio as an Iranian-American. His love of soccer began with an old VHS tape — '50 greatest World Cup goals' — that he and his father watched repeatedly together. One tape became boxes of taped matches stacked in the living room. Kevin started playing in a neighbourhood league; Farhad took him to meet American players like Brad Friedel and Brian McBride. Soccer became more than a sport — it became the primary thread connecting Kevin to his Iranian side and to his father. Their typical evening together, he says, is cooking Persian food and turning on a game. Farhad calls Kevin an 'encyclopedia of soccer,' capable of reciting what happened in specific games from when he was 11.
Claims made here
Iran beat the United States 2-1 at the 1998 World Cup — the first time the two nations met in World Cup play.
When Kevin was 11, his father told him Iran had qualified for the 1998 World Cup — a defining family memory tied to his Iranian heritage.
In 1998, when Iran beat the US 2-1 at the World Cup, Iranian-American Kevin was 11 years old, sitting in an Ohio restaurant surrounded by American fans, quietly cheering for both teams. That game was the first time his two identities were pitted against each other in the sport he loved — and it wouldn't be the last.
Iran beat the United States 2-1 in the 1998 World Cup — a result that was later used as government propaganda by the Iranian regime.
Chapter 16 · 25:40
Iran Qualifies for 1998 World Cup: A Defining Family Memory
In 1998, Iran's national team was strong. Kevin and Farhad started following them closely, cutting out newspaper articles about their matches. Then one day Farhad sat his family down with big news: Iran had qualified for the World Cup. Kevin says it took him just two guesses to figure out what the announcement was, and it's a moment he will always remember. Iran then played — and beat — the United States 2-1 in what was the first-ever meeting between the two nations in World Cup play. For Kevin, it was the first time his two identities were pitted against each other in the sport he loved.
When Kevin decided to take his father Farhad to see the US-Iran game at the 2022 Qatar World Cup, Farhad planned the itinerary with legendary precision — maps, train times, two backup copies. But Kevin had one addition: they'd start the trip with Farhad's lifelong dream of visiting Mecca. A religious pilgrimage followed by a sports pilgrimage.
The US and Iran only met in World Cup play in 1998 and 2022 — over 20 years apart — before meeting again in the context of active conflict in 2026.
Chapter 18 · 29:20
2026: The War Seeps Into the Game
Iran's 2026 World Cup group-stage games are in Los Angeles — practically next door to where Kevin and Farhad now live. But the context is radically different from any previous tournament. There is an actual war. There is nationalistic rhetoric and presidential statements that Kevin found 'troublesome' — Trump saying Iranian players could come but couldn't guarantee their safety. The US restricted player visas so severely that the Iranian squad was forced to stay in Tijuana and cross the border for just one day at a time. Kevin tries to separate the people from the politics, to cheer for the Iranian players as representatives of the Iranian people rather than the regime. But he acknowledges it is impossible to fully block out. He describes the feeling as 'standing over a ledge' — a huge, unresolved thing beneath him, full of unease and danger, with no clear resolution in sight.
Claims made here
The US restricted visas for Iranian World Cup players, forcing them to stay in Tijuana and enter the US for only one day at a time.
The Iranian team's 1998 World Cup victory over the US was later used by the Iranian government as political propaganda.
Due to US visa restrictions, Iranian players were initially forced to stay in Tijuana and were only allowed into the US for a single day at a time.
Chapter 20 · 34:55
Elimination and the Farewell Note
Iran drew all of their group-stage matches and were eliminated from the 2026 World Cup without a win. Farhad was disappointed; he felt the real-world political repercussions had seeped into the team's campaign and made success impossible. Kevin, meanwhile, was excited — his other team, the US, was advancing. Before leaving Los Angeles, the Iranian players wrote a farewell message on the dressing room whiteboard: from ancient Persia to civilised Iran, the spirit remains alive. 'We came to Los Angeles with pride, competed with honor, and leave with dignity.' They thanked Los Angeles for its hospitality, and every Iranian who had given their voice and soul for 180 minutes. 'May peace, respect, and friendship prevail among all nations.' When Anna Foley read the note to Farhad and asked what he thought, he said: 'They wrote what I feel.'
Claims made here
Iran tied all of their group-stage matches and was eliminated from the 2026 World Cup without winning a game.
After being eliminated without a win, the Iranian team wrote on the stadium dressing room whiteboard: 'We came to Los Angeles with pride, competed with honor, and leave with dignity.' When producer Anna Foley read it to Farhad, he said: 'They wrote what I feel.' Four words that captured everything.
Iran drew all of their group-stage matches and were eliminated from the 2026 World Cup without winning a single game.
Chapter 22 · 38:41
News Briefing: US-Iran Ceasefire and Venezuela Earthquakes
The episode closes with Natalie Kitroeff's news briefing. On Iran: the US and Iran have reached an agreement to stop attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and allow free passage of ships, according to a US official — though Iran had not confirmed the deal as of Sunday night. This follows a series of escalating exchanges: the US accused Iran of striking an oil tanker, then carried out attacks on Iranian air defence sites; Iran retaliated with drone and missile strikes on a US naval base in Bahrain and an airbase in Kuwait, with no casualties reported. On Venezuela: the death toll from two earthquakes that struck earlier in the week has risen above 1,400, with thousands more injured. More than 430 aftershocks have followed, and rescue efforts in La Guaira, the worst-affected state, have been paralysed by civilian vehicles blocking roads and leaving aid workers stranded in traffic.
Claims made here
The US and Iran agreed to stop attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and allow ships to move freely through it, according to a US official.
The death toll from two earthquakes that devastated Venezuela rose to more than 1,400 people, with thousands more injured and over 430 aftershocks recorded.
More than three days after two earthquakes hit Venezuela, the death toll had risen to over 1,400 people, with thousands more injured.
More than 430 aftershocks followed the Venezuela earthquakes, driving many residents of La Guaira to sleep outside fearing building collapse.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
-
Argentine soccer legend referenced for his World Cup hat-trick and record-tying goalscoring, and described as the benchmark for the next generation of superstars.
-
US President whose administration's immigration policies, threats toward co-hosts Canada and Mexico, and ambiguous statements about Iranian players' safety cast a shadow over the World Cup's preparation.
-
Norwegian soccer star, described as one of the most famous people in the world, who is based with Norway's team in Greensboro, North Carolina for the 2026 World Cup.
-
Young Spanish soccer phenom described as the next global superstar after Messi and Ronaldo, spotted shopping at a Walmart in Chattanooga while Spain used the city as their World Cup base.
-
The international governing body of soccer, which organised the 2026 World Cup and whose referee from Somalia was denied US entry.
-
Iran's national team is competing in the 2026 World Cup while the country is in active military conflict with host nation the United States, creating deep complexity for Iranian-American fans.
-
Co-host of the 2026 FIFA World Cup along with Canada and Mexico, and the country in active military conflict with one of the competing nations, Iran.
-
Scotland's national team and their famous Tartan Army fan base made their first World Cup appearance since 1998, creating a celebrated cultural moment in Boston.
-
Host city that became the epicentre of Scottish Tartan Army fandom at the 2026 World Cup, with the Boston Globe dedicating a full page to thanking Scotland's fans.
-
Host city for Iran's World Cup group-stage matches, and home to a large Iranian-American diaspora community whose internal tensions over how to support the team played out publicly outside the stadium.
-
Algeria's World Cup team chose Lawrence, Kansas as their base camp, with the University of Kansas marching band learning the Algerian national anthem to welcome them.
-
Norway's World Cup team is based in Greensboro, North Carolina, and their fans' Viking row chant in a New York subway became a viral image of international fan culture at the 2026 tournament.
-
Small college town that served as Algeria's World Cup base camp and became a symbol of America's unexpected warmth toward international visitors.
-
Strategic waterway that was the site of US-Iran military exchanges during the World Cup, with both nations agreeing to halt attacks and allow free passage of ships.
-
Mexican border city where Iranian World Cup players were forced to stay due to US visa restrictions, crossing into the US for only one day at a time to play matches.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup has hit its highest attendance ever and generated the most goals scored in World Cup history.
The 2026 World Cup is the biggest ever, featuring 48 national teams.
Scotland had not qualified for the World Cup since 1998, prior to 2026.
Scotland's positive fan culture was deliberately created as an opposition to the hooliganism around English football in the 1980s and 1990s.
A FIFA referee from Somalia who was on the list to work at the 2026 World Cup was denied entry to the US and sent back to Turkey.
Iran beat the United States 2-1 at the 1998 World Cup — the first time the two nations met in World Cup play.
The US restricted visas for Iranian World Cup players, forcing them to stay in Tijuana and enter the US for only one day at a time.
Iran tied all of their group-stage matches and was eliminated from the 2026 World Cup without winning a game.
The US and Iran agreed to stop attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and allow ships to move freely through it, according to a US official.
The death toll from two earthquakes that devastated Venezuela rose to more than 1,400 people, with thousands more injured and over 430 aftershocks recorded.
The 2026 World Cup is the first time a participating team has been in active military conflict with a host nation.
The Iranian team's 1998 World Cup victory over the US was later used by the Iranian government as political propaganda.
No links parsed
We scan show notes for social handles, websites and apps. Nothing matched on this episode.