Sarah Horvath, director of the Kino Sports Complex in Tucson, Arizona, has confirmed that the facility is continuing to prepare for the arrival of Team IR Iran with no instruction from FIFA or from the Iranian federation to stand down. The complex was named as Iran's pre-tournament training base earlier this year and the 10 June arrival deadline for participating squads remains on the operations schedule.
The operational status is the most useful single indicator of how seriously to take the political noise around Iran's participation. Kino is a physical facility with budgeted staffing, scheduled deliveries and a pitch maintenance calendar; halting the Iran preparation would generate an audit trail FIFA's lawyers and the Iranian federation's lawyers would both have to explain. The fact that no such instruction has issued is, in operational terms, the Iran question answered before any congress votes on it.
What the Tucson preparation also exposes is the granularity of FIFA's contingency planning. The host city's US travel-ban environment was foreseeable in 2018 when the bid was awarded, foreseeable again when Iran qualified, and foreseeable when the November policy escalation broadened the visa restrictions. A working training facility within the United States, ready for an Iranian squad, is the kind of preparation that does not happen unless multiple layers of FIFA's operations side judged participation to be the planning base case throughout. Whatever ratification follows in Canada at month-end will inherit that base case rather than choose between alternatives.
