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Ninety XI/June 14, 2026

The 2026 FIFA World Cup Group G match, Iran vs. New Zealand, begins at 02:00 [GMT+1] on Tuesday, June 16, at Los Angeles Stadium. César Ramos [MEX] will be the referee for this match, while Nicolás Gallo [COL] will be the VAR.

Iran [DLWWW] begin their FIFA World Cup campaign amid extraordinary circumstances as they prepare to face New Zealand in an encounter that could prove pivotal in the battle to reach the knockout rounds. While the focus should be on football, the build-up has been dominated by uncertainty surrounding Iran’s participation due to geopolitical tensions and ongoing conflict involving the nation. With reports suggesting a potential peace agreement is on the horizon, Iran will hope the spotlight can finally shift back onto their performances on the pitch. Amir Ghalenoei’s side have shown encouraging form in recent weeks, arriving at the tournament on the back of three successive friendly victories. Those results have strengthened belief that Team Melli can build on the progress made at recent World Cups, where they secured memorable victories in both 2018 and 2022. A strong start will be crucial if they are to harbour realistic ambitions of advancing from a group that also contains Egypt and Belgium. Historically, opening matches have not been kind to them, with just one victory from five previous World Cup openers [1W, 1D, 4L]. However, confidence can be drawn from their record against New Zealand, having never conceded a goal across two previous meetings [1W, 1D, 0L]. Iran’s preparations have been slightly disrupted by injury concerns. Alireza Jahanbakhsh and Roozbeh Cheshmi are on the treatment table. Mehdi Taremi is expected at the attacking end of Team Melli’s 4—2—3—1 formation against the All Whites.

New Zealand [LLWLL], meanwhile, return to football’s grandest stage for the first time since 2010 and will relish the opportunity to prove they belong among the world’s elite. The Oceania representatives arrive with renewed confidence after recording a historic 4-1 victory over Chile, their first-ever win against South American opposition. Yet Darren Bazeley’s men also experienced a sobering reminder of the level required at this tournament when they suffered consecutive heavy defeats in warm-up matches on American soil, conceding five goals without reply. Those setbacks highlighted the challenge facing the All Whites as they seek a first-ever World Cup victory after drawing three and losing three of their previous six matches at the finals [0W, 3D, 3L]. Ryan Thomas is a doubt for this encounter, as Chris Wood is expected to start upfront when a 4—2—3—1 pattern is deployed against Iran.

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