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2026 FIFA World Cup
4JUL

$1bn suit hits FIFA over Iran's exit

3 min read
10:34UTC

An Iranian-American academic, not Iran's football federation, has filed a $1bn suit against FIFA and Gianni Infantino in Boston over Iran's World Cup exit.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

A private $1bn suit, not Iran's federation, is challenging FIFA, but no US court can reverse the offside call.

Lotfollah Kaveh Afrasiabi, an Iranian-American academic, filed a $1bn federal lawsuit against FIFA and its president Gianni Infantino in Boston on 30 June, brought, he says, on behalf of 91 million Iranians. 1 Iran's own football federation, the FFIRI, has taken no case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), sport's highest tribunal, whose media-release page carried no Iranian filing as of 4 July. 2

The suit alleges that a disallowed Iran goal against Egypt on 26 June, ruled out by the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) for offside, cost Iran the match that eliminated them on the tournament's third-place tiebreaker . It also cites visa denials for at least 11 delegation members and the forced move of Iran's training camp from Arizona to Tijuana. 3

CAS is the only body with jurisdiction over a sporting-grievance appeal, and a US federal court cannot order FIFA to replay a match or reverse a refereeing call. FIFA's own rulebook treats referees' on-field decisions as final and non-justiciable, so the disallowed-goal claim reads as expressive rather than remediable. Afrasiabi also carries a credibility complication reporting cannot ignore: the US Department of Justice charged him in 2021 under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), alleging he had acted as an unregistered agent of the Iranian government. He brought the action as a private civil filing, legally distinct from any move by the FFIRI, and its claims remain untested allegations. 4

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Lotfollah Kaveh Afrasiabi, an Iranian-American academic, has sued FIFA and its president Gianni Infantino for $1bn in a US federal court in Boston. The suit centres on a goal that was disallowed by VAR (video assistant referee, a video review system) in Iran's final group match against Egypt on 26 June, a result that ended Iran's tournament on a tiebreaker. Afrasiabi was himself charged by the US Department of Justice in 2021 under FARA, a law requiring people who lobby for foreign governments to register as such, over an alleged unregistered role representing Iran's interests. Iran's own football federation has not filed any complaint with the Court of Arbitration for Sport, the body that actually rules on sporting disputes, meaning this private lawsuit is currently the only legal challenge over Iran's exit.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The suit exists because Iran's own football federation, FFIRI, has not itself pursued any case at the Court of Arbitration for Sport. A private citizen's US federal filing fills that vacuum, but only FFIRI, as the aggrieved competition party, would hold standing to challenge the result itself; Afrasiabi's private suit cannot substitute for that.

Afrasiabi's own 2021 FARA charge, brought by the US Department of Justice over an alleged unregistered lobbying role for Iran, adds a structural complication: any suit he personally brings on Iran's behalf invites the same scrutiny of his ties to Tehran that produced the original charge.

First Reported In

Update #33 · Mexico City doubles police for Azteca tie

Court of Arbitration for Sport· 4 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
$1bn suit hits FIFA over Iran's exit
No US court can reverse the offside call, and Iran's federation has filed no CAS case, leaving the $1bn private suit as an expressive gesture rather than a legal threat.
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