Iran scored two late goals to seal their first points at the Qatar World Cup on Friday, during a crunch game against Wales at the Ahmed Bin Ali Stadium in Doha.
After an uneventful first-half, Iran dominated the passage of play in the second with Team Melli hitting the post twice in the space of 10 seconds.
In the 51st minute, Sardar Azmoun cracked the right-hand of the post after a beautiful angled through pass, then Ali Gholizadeh beat the flying Wayne Hennessey with an extravagant long-range curler that thumped the left-hand of the post.
Iran continued to pressure the Red Dragons and in the 86th minute Hennessey saw red after denying Mehdi Taremi a clear goalscoring opportunity.
Substitute Rouzbeh Cheshmi finally found the back of the net with a screamer in the 98th minute while Ramin Rezaeian dinked the ball over Danny Ward in the 101st.
The match was charged from the start with all eyes focused on whether Iran’s players would sing their national anthem, four days after staying silent in attempt to distance themselves from their government.
Some of the players could be seen mouthing rather than singing the anthem, and change of approach reportedly came after it emerged they could face reprisals.
Mehdi Chamran, the chairman of Tehran city council, said earlier this week that authorities would “never allow anyone to insult our anthem and flag. Iranian civilisation has a history of several thousand years, this civilisation is as old as the total of European and American civilisations.”
Speaking after Friday match, Iran’s manager Carlos Queiroz said the team “deserved to be supported,” after he was asked what his message was to the Iranian people.
“We did it for them [the fans], we did it for them. That’s the only reason we’re here, to play for the fans.”
Anger had boiled over on Thursday when a BBC journalist asked striker Taremi whether he had a message for those who are protesting in Iran.
In an exchange with the reporter, Queiroz said it was “strange” other managers such as England gaffer Gareth Southgate were spared questions about politics and political strife.
“Why don’t you ask the other coaches?” Queiroz said. “Why don’t you ask Southgate: ‘what do you think about England and the United States that left Afghanistan and all the women alone?'”
MEE