Iran held Belgium to a goalless draw at the Los Angeles Stadium on Sunday 21 June, and the result said more than the scoreline. The side made to fly in 24 hours before kickoff and return to Tijuana the same night, under a protocol Rudy Giuliani refused to ease last week , defended for an hour against ten men and took the point home 1. Iran are Group G's most off-pitch-restricted team: no home crowd, no full federation in the country, and a travel routine no rival has to manage.
Mehdi Torabi started and lasted to the 66th minute, his place secured only after a visa re-issue when his single-entry permit expired following the New Zealand match . Mehdi Taremi thought he had won it on 25 minutes, finishing an Ehsan Hajsafi free-kick low past Thibaut Courtois, but the Video Assistant Referee (VAR, the off-field official who reviews goals) ruled him marginally offside. Alireza Beiranvand then kept Kevin De Bruyne and Youri Tielemans out through a second half Belgium spent a man short, after Nathan Ngoy was sent off on 66 minutes for hauling down a striker clean through on a mishit back-pass.
The maths now favours Iran more than the draw suggests. They reached 2 points off a Belgium side that could not convert a man advantage, the same return banked in the opening 2-2 draw with New Zealand . Egypt top the group on 4 points after beating New Zealand 3-1 the same day and are through. Iran and Belgium, level on two, scrap for second on 26 June, with Egypt facing Iran in Seattle and New Zealand facing Belgium in Vancouver. The two cannot meet again: second place turns on goal difference and the Egypt-Iran scoreline, not a head-to-head, and a team that holds ten men without conceding has the discipline those three-way ties reward. Coach Amir Ghalenoei called the draw vindication of a defensive plan built around constraints no rival has to manage.
