Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
2026 FIFA World Cup
7JUN

Bloomberg: FIFA cannot legally move Iran's matches

2 min read
10:36UTC

Bloomberg's reporting confirms FIFA has no mechanism to relocate scheduled matches, legally closing the one condition Iran named for participation.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Host city agreements make Iran's relocation demand legally impossible for FIFA to grant.

Bloomberg reported on 6 April that FIFA's host city agreements require consent from all three host nations (USA, Canada, Mexico) and all 16 host cities before any match can be relocated after the schedule is published. That is not a political constraint FIFA can override; it is a contractual one.

Donyamali set relocation as the sole condition for participation ; this finding establishes that FIFA cannot meet that condition under any circumstances. The relocation demand was always the condition that could not be met. Bloomberg's reporting places this on the public record, ending any ambiguity about whether a back-channel arrangement might be possible.

Both sides understand this; neither has acknowledged it officially, which is why the deadlock continues as the 30 April Congress approaches.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

FIFA cannot simply decide to move Iran's matches to Mexico, even if it wanted to. The contracts with the 16 host cities are legally binding on all parties. Moving a match requires every city—and all three host countries—to agree. That agreement is not going to happen in 20 days.

What could happen next?
  • The Bloomberg analysis removes the last public ambiguity about FIFA's options; Iran's condition is now publicly documented as legally impossible to meet.

  • Both parties now publicly know the relocation is impossible; continued public positioning without resolution becomes harder to sustain as the 30 April Congress approaches.

First Reported In

Update #6 · FIFA's stealth price hike

Bloomberg· 10 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Bloomberg: FIFA cannot legally move Iran's matches
Removes any ambiguity about FIFA's legal options, making clear the Iran impasse is structurally unresolvable without a withdrawal or a face-saving formula neither side has proposed.
Different Perspectives
Andrea Abodi / Italian Sports Ministry
Andrea Abodi / Italian Sports Ministry
Abodi's ANAC referral on Malagò's FIGC eligibility set a 15 June deadline, meaning Italy's federation leadership crisis peaks at the midpoint of the group stage. Malagò holds more than 50 percent of the assembly bloc but cannot take office while the pantouflage cooling-off challenge is formally live.
World Cup ticket-holders
World Cup ticket-holders
Fans who paid face value for any of the 76 US fixtures now below that price in the resale market have lost money before a ball is kicked, with no FIFA refund mechanism. The NY and NJ attorney-general subpoenas served 27 May offer a potential remedy route that will not resolve before the group stage.
Thomas Tuchel / England
Thomas Tuchel / England
Tuchel fielded two entirely separate elevens against New Zealand, using 22 players across 90 minutes and citing four collective training sessions as his reasoning. The choice leaves his preferred starting eleven untested as a unit ahead of England's tournament opener.
Steve Clarke / Scotland
Steve Clarke / Scotland
Clarke reported no injuries after Scotland's 4-0 win over Bolivia and a first four-goal first half in national-team history, ending 30 years without victory over South American opposition. Scotland face Portugal in Group B four days from now in the form peak of their qualifying campaign.
UNITE HERE Local 11
UNITE HERE Local 11
After a 96 percent strike-authorisation vote, Local 11 returns to talks with Legends Global on 8 June with its core ICE-moratorium demand still unanswered by FIFA since 8 May. A picket at the 12 June SoFi opener, five days away, is the union's stated leverage.
FFIRI / Iran delegation
FFIRI / Iran delegation
FFIRI confirmed all 23 players hold US visas and landed in Tijuana, but stated 14 officials including vice-president Mehdi Mohammad Nabi and secretary-general Hedayat Mombeini were refused entry on what the federation called false pretences. Iran's group-stage preparation is now dependent on remote coordination with Tehran.