Iran 1–1 New Zealand at World Cup 2026: Elijah Just Stuns in Los Angeles as Rezaeian Fights Back in Group G Thriller

FIFA World Cup 2026 | Group H | SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles | June 16, 2026

New Zealand’s Elijah Just. Remember that name.

The Motherwell midfielder — playing his club football in the Scottish Premiership — walked into SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles on Tuesday and scored one of the most memorable goals of the 2026 World Cup so far. New Zealand led Iran 1–0. The crowd inside SoFi was deafening — almost entirely pro-Iran. And yet the All Whites were winning.

Then Ramin Rezaeian equalised in the 32nd minute, and Los Angeles erupted.

At the 35-minute mark: Iran 1–1 New Zealand — and this match is far from over.


The Goal That Started It All — Elijah Just, 7 Minutes

Nobody gave New Zealand a chance tonight.

Iran, ranked far higher and containing Mehdi Taremi — one of the most dangerous strikers in European football — were heavy favourites. New Zealand were the lowest-ranked team in the entire tournament. This was supposed to be comfortable.

Then Chris Wood happened.

The Nottingham Forest striker, physicality personified, held up the ball brilliantly inside the Iran half and laid it off perfectly into the path of Elijah Just. The Motherwell man did not hesitate — a clean, crisp finish that flew past Alireza Beiranvand and gave New Zealand a stunning seventh-minute lead.

It was only New Zealand’s fifth ever goal at a World Cup finals. And it was a very good one.

Former BBC pundit Chris Sutton called Just “such an intelligent player” — adding that it was “too easy” for Chris Wood to turn and create the chance. Iran’s defence had been completely exposed.


Taremi Hits the Post — The Moment Iran Nearly Levelled

Iran did not panic. Mehdi Taremi, their captain and talisman, led a dangerous counter-attack in the 24th minute that had New Zealand retreating desperately.

Four against two. Taremi stormed forward, held the ball, and unleashed a fierce strike — only for the ball to crash off the right-hand upright. Goalkeeper Max Crocombe was beaten. The post saved New Zealand.

Former Everton midfielder Leon Osman on BBC Radio 5 Live was blunt: “It was four against two and the moment he decides to go himself, he has to score. He was very unlucky hitting the post but he had so many opportunities. They had to score there.”


Crocombe’s Horror Moment — And Iran’s Near Miss

New Zealand’s goalkeeper Max Crocombe then gave the travelling fans a heart attack.

The Millwall stopper was too relaxed on the ball as Iran’s Mohebi closed him down. The loose ball fell to Saman Ghoddos, who looped a shot towards the empty net — it went narrowly wide. Crocombe survived. Just barely.


Rezaeian Levels — Los Angeles Erupts

The equaliser came in the 32nd minute and it sparked scenes inside SoFi Stadium that went well beyond football.

Ramin Rezaeian found the net for Iran — and the Iranian fans in Los Angeles, who had packed the stadium despite the political chaos surrounding this match, went absolutely wild. These supporters had faced visa restrictions, ticket confiscations, and travel nightmares just to be here. When that goal went in, every bit of frustration poured out in celebration.

At half-time: Iran 1–1 New Zealand.


The Match Bigger Than Football

This was never just a football match.

Iran’s build-up to the 2026 World Cup has been one of the most turbulent in tournament history. The team was forced to relocate their training base from Tucson, Arizona to Tijuana, Mexico — effectively commuting across the border for every match — due to US-Iran diplomatic tensions following the countries’ recent conflict.

Captain Mehdi Taremi did not hold back before kick-off: “I have felt the tension from the first moment we arrived at this World Cup. This kind of tension, it undermines that joy and it undermines the message of Fifa and our people, which is that football brings about peace.”

Iranian protesters had vowed to disrupt the match — booing the national anthem, turning their backs, displaying pre-revolutionary flags that are currently banned by the Iranian government. Iran’s coach Amir Ghalenoei was reportedly under direct instructions from his government to halt play if those flags appeared.

The anthem was ultimately cheered inside the stadium. Football, for 90 minutes at least, took over.


New Zealand’s Diplomatic Win Off the Pitch

While Iran struggled with visa denials and a government delegation that could barely enter the country, New Zealand had the soft-power landscape of Los Angeles entirely to themselves.

New Zealand consul-general Katja Ackerley hosted a “New Zealand on the World Stage” reception at her Brentwood mansion the night before the match — wine, lamb, trade deals, and sports diplomacy. Peter Miskimmin, New Zealand’s head of sports diplomacy, put it simply: “We are building relations through sport rather than bringing up arms against one another.”

It was their first World Cup in 16 years. They came prepared for every battlefield.


What This Means for Group G

Belgium and Egypt drew 1–1 earlier on Monday. That result, combined with this one, means Group G is wide open after Matchday 1.

Group G standings after 35 minutes of Iran vs New Zealand:

TeamPWDLGFGAPts
Belgium1010111
Egypt1010111
Iran1*11
New Zealand1*11

*Match in progress

A New Zealand win tonight would send them top of Group G — one of the biggest stories of the tournament. An Iran win keeps them in contention. A draw keeps everything impossibly tight.


Key Match Facts (35 Minutes)

  • Venue: SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles, California
  • Competition: FIFA World Cup 2026, Group G, Matchday 1
  • Date: June 16, 2026
  • Score at 35′: Iran 1–1 New Zealand
  • New Zealand goal: Elijah Just (7′) — assist: Chris Wood
  • Iran goal: Ramin Rezaeian (32′)
  • Key miss: Mehdi Taremi — right post (24′)
  • Iran coach: Amir Ghalenoei
  • New Zealand coach: Tony Readings

Starting Line-Ups

Iran (4-3-3): Beiranvand; Khalilzadeh, Mohammadi, Yousefi, Nemati, Rezaeian; Ezatolahi, Mohebi, Ghoddos; Taremi (c), Moghanlou

New Zealand (4-4-2): Crocombe; Payne, Boxall, Cacace, Surman; Bell, Stamenic, Singh, Just, McCowatt; Wood


Ones to Watch — Second Half

Mehdi Taremi needs a goal. The Iran captain has been dangerous but wasteful — that post will haunt him if Iran drop points tonight.

Chris Wood is a nightmare for any defence. If New Zealand get the ball to him, he will cause problems. His assist for Just showed exactly what he brings.

Elijah Just — the Motherwell man has already made history. Can he do it again?


Check back on Kicks & Clips for the full-time result, second half report, and Group G standings update.


Follow all FIFA World Cup 2026 coverage on Kicks & Clips — match reports, player ratings, group standings, and analysis throughout the tournament.


Tags: Iran vs New Zealand · Iran New Zealand World Cup 2026 · Chris Wood · Elijah Just · Mehdi Taremi · Iran national football team · New Zealand national football team · Group G World Cup 2026 · SoFi Stadium Los Angeles · New Zealand football · Iran football · Iran vs New Zealand prediction · New Zealand World Cup · Iran World Cup 2026

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top