Iran’s World Cup opener against New Zealand carried a political edge before kickoff, and some supporters found a creative way to make their point inside the stadium.
The dispute centered on Iran’s pre-revolutionary Lion and Sun flag, a symbol used by many in the Iranian diaspora and opposed by the current Islamic Republic.
FIFA’s decision to restrict it at World Cup venues gave the match another layer of tension beyond soccer. That tension was visible once fans appeared to turn separate pieces of fabric into one banned symbol during the game.
Iran fans sew a pre-revolutionary flag together during World Cup match
In a post shared by Throwback Iran on X, a group of Iranian fans were seen as bringing different parts of the pre-revolutionary flag into the stadium before sewing them together during the match.
Instead of carrying the full flag through security, the pieces appeared to be assembled after entry. For those fans, the Lion and Sun flag is not just a historical design.
It has become a visible statement of identity and opposition to the current Iranian regime, especially among diaspora communities attending matches in North America.
The scene quickly spread because it turned a security rule into a moment of fan improvisation. It also showed how difficult it can be for FIFA to separate soccer from national symbols that carry different meanings for different groups of supporters.
FIFA banned Iran Lion and Sun flag before New Zealand opener
FIFA’s position has been that the pre-revolutionary Iranian flag falls under rules restricting political banners, clothing and other material inside World Cup stadiums.
The flag, featuring the Lion and Sun emblem used before the 1979 revolution, is associated by many with the previous monarchy and by others with a broader Iranian identity separate from the Islamic Republic. That dual meaning is why the ban has become so contested.
Supporters critical of the ban argue that the flag should not be treated as offensive or discriminatory. They see it as a symbol of heritage and protest, particularly when they do not feel represented by the current official flag.
FIFA has faced legal pressure and public criticism over the restriction, but its stadium policy is built around keeping political displays out of matches. Iran’s opener against New Zealand became one of the clearest tests of how far that policy can actually reach.
The stitched-together flag was the answer from fans who wanted to be seen anyway. FIFA could block the full symbol at the gate, but it could not stop supporters from turning separate pieces into a message once the match had started.
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