Amid unrest at home, Iran’s players are refusing to stay silent
While Iran’s national team prepares to take part in the World Cup, events back home have captured the world’s attention.
The country has been engulfed by protests after the death on September 13 of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old who had been detained by the country’s morality police for failing to properly wear a hijab.
While questions swirl over Amini’s death, protests over women’s rights and Iran’s difficult political and economic situations have spread all over the country. Reports suggested that at least 70 people have been killed after the hard-line government cracked down on the protesters.
Amid this backdrop, Iran faced Senegal in a friendly on Tuesday just outside of Vienna, Austria.
Iran’s federation opted to play the match behind closed doors to minimize the potential of protests, but there were still protesters that showed up outside the stadium.
Before the game, Iran’s players stood for their national anthem wearing jackets that covered up the country’s colors and badge, a subtle but significant show of support for the protesters back home.
Iran's soccer team wore black jackets to cover up their country's emblem during the national anthem. This is a huge statement of support for the protests in Iran and they're extremely brave for doing this. pic.twitter.com/yV1JBGB1I9
One of the most significant displays of support from Iran’s national team came from Sardar Azmoun, one of the team’s best players.
The Bayer Leverkusen forward posted and then deleted an Instagram story where he strongly stood up for protesters in Iran, even going as far as to say his support would be worth banishment from the national team if necessary.
“The ultimate [punishment] is to be kicked out of the national team, which is a small price to pay for even a single strand of Iranian women’s hair. Shame on you for easily killing the people and viva women of Iran. Long live Iranian women!” he wrote.
Sardar Azmoun did not celebrate at all after scoring Iran's first goal against Senegal in a friendly match on Tuesday held behind closed doors in Austria. Outside the venue, dozens of Iranian expats expressed their protest at the silence of Azmoun's teammates amid #IranProtests. https://t.co/Cx8LAka6IL
Last week, Iranian player Zobeir Niknafs posted an Instagram video in which he shaved his head in solidarity with the protesters.
There are much bigger questions than what will happen to Iran’s national team, but the fate of players who speak out is significant all the same. Will the likes of Azmoun and Niknafs be punished? And will Iranian players plan any kind of protest when the World Cup kicks off in two months?
If Iran’s government was hoping its most visible athletes would back down, it appears that they will be disappointed.
Queiroz coached Iran between 2011 and 2019, taking the country to the World Cup in 2014 and 2018.
Iran will hope Queiroz will bring some stability after a tumultuous period under previous coach Dragan Skočić, who was removed from his position twice in a two-month span.
Skočić was originally fired in July, but widespread protests saw the Croatian reinstated just days later. The Iranian federation would offer no such reprieve this time around.
Skočić led Iran to a 8W-1D-1L record in 10 World Cup qualifiers, but his time in charge of the team was filled with reported conflicts with some of his top players.
After leaving his post with Iran in 2019, Queiroz coached Colombia and Egypt, adding to a lengthy coaching career that also included a stint in MLS with the then-NY/NJ MetroStars, Real Madrid, and his native Portugal, which he took to the 2010 World Cup.
Iran was drawn in Group B at the World Cup, where it will face England (Nov. 21), Wales (Nov. 25) and the United States (Nov. 29).
Ukrainian International Airlines Flight 752 was shot down by the Iranian military in 2020, killing 55 Canadian citizens
Count Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau among those not pleased with Canada Soccer’s choice to schedule a friendly next month against Iran.
As a lead-in to their upcoming CONCACAF Nations League matches against Curaçao and Honduras, Canada has scheduled Iran for a friendly in Vancouver on June 5. On the surface, it’s a very normal thing for World Cup-bound teams to do: When you get the chance, scheduling other teams that have qualified is a good way to test yourself for the challenge to come.
However, in this case the context is crucial. According to the Canadian government, 55 Canadian citizens and 30 more permanent residents were killed when Ukrainian International Airlines Flight 752 was shot down by the Iranian military shortly after it took off from Tehran on January 8, 2020.
According to an investigation by two United Nations experts, the incident was due in part to “systematic violations and failures by the Iranian authorities to meet their human rights obligation.”
With that in mind, Trudeau hit out at the decision to schedule the friendly.
“This was a decision by Sport Canada, Soccer Canada. I think it wasn’t a very good idea to invite the Iranian soccer team here to Canada,” said Trudeau when asked by reporters about the decision to grant the Iran delegation visas. “That’s something the organizers are going to have to explain.”
In an op-ed in The Globe and Mail, Hamed Esmaeilion, the chief spokesperson for the Association of Families of Flight PS752 Victims, called on the game to be cancelled.
“This invitation is an affront to those who lost loved ones in the downing of Flight PS752,” Esmaeilion wrote.
“Freedom does not come free … and we just can’t forget that.”
One day years ago in the early 1990s, when Rocky Sickmann’s daughter was still in grade school, she came home and asked her father to speak to her class.
He asked why. She grabbed her history book that was wrapped tight with a brown Kroger shopping bag, opened it up and said, “Because we’re learning about you.”
The son and brother of men who served in the Army, Sickmann served in the Marines from 1976-1981 and was one of the 65 Americans taken hostage for 444 days during the Iran Hostage Crisis.
After the Marines, Sickmann worked 34 years for Anheuser-Busch before his retirement, where he now oversees the Budweiser account for Folds of Honor, a non-profit organization that provides academic scholarships to the children of wounded or killed soldiers. Since 2007, the group has provided 35,000 scholarships.
Working with Folds, which now has 32 chapters across the country, allows Sickmann to continually aid military dependents and honor the eight soldiers who died in an unsuccessful rescue attempt.
“Along with 65 other Americans our freedom, dignity and pride were stripped on November 4, 1979, and little did I know that I would have to spend the next 444 days in the darkest times of my life,” said Sickmann.
‘Death to America’
For the first 30 days, the hostages’ arms and feet were tied to a chair. The 400 days after that Sickmann was locked in a room with two other Americans. Over that span, the three went outside just seven times for 15 minutes. After a failed rescue attempt, known as Operation Eagle Claw, resulted in the death of eight service members, the hostages were moved from Tehran and sat for four months waiting until the Iran-Iraq War started. They were then brought back to prison for another four months from September through December in 1980.
Sickmann spent two Thanksgivings, two Christmases and his 23rd birthday as a hostage, dreaming of his freedom each and every day.
“It was 1981, January 20, and they came into our room and after 444 days … they take us from our room, blindfolded, take us in, they lead us outside, I walk into something I hadn’t felt for two years, snow through my open-toed shoes,” remembered Sickmann. “They put us in a vehicle, drive about 30 minutes and all of a sudden, we hear the sound of an airplane. This was something you had prayed for, you had hoped for, you had cried for an opportunity just to have the second chance in life.”
“The vehicle stops right behind the airplane, the force of the jet is pushing against the vehicle that we were in, and they tell us to un-blindfold. We only saw a total of five people of the 65 for the 444 days. And here you are looking at people that you had breakfast with on November 4, 1979,” he explained. “And they take us one-by-one to the plane and they’re chanting, ‘Death to America.’ I hadn’t seen a woman in 444 days and a stewardess takes me up and puts me down and you’re freed, and you would think that you would be excited, jumping up and down, but they’re chanting, ‘Death to America’ and you’re boarding this airplane and you just don’t understand what’s going on.”
As a hostage, Sickmann experienced it all: mock executions, blindfolded trips just to use the bathroom, beatings and malnourishment, the tragedies go on. After all that, the captors still had one final trick up their sleeve.
“The plane gets to the end of the runway and they’re getting ready to take off and all of a sudden, the pilot comes on and says they turned the runway lights off. For 444 days, it’s the mind games that were played,” said Sickmann. “They waited 20 minutes until President Carter was out of office, and President Reagan was in, to turn the runway lights on and then taxi down the runway. And it wasn’t until the plane got off the ground and into Turkish airspace that the pilot had told us that we were now freed and we came unglued.”
Homecoming
Sickmann had met a girl before he left the States and told himself he’d marry her if he got the chance when he returned.
“And so I call home to speak to my mom and dad, my dad said, ‘Rocky, Jill’s here. And I said, ‘She waited?’ And he goes, ‘No, she wants to talk to you.’ And I said, ‘Well, that doesn’t sound good.’ She gets on the line and she says, ‘Rocky, you got to make a decision, either me or the military. But I can’t do this.’ I chose wisely,” said Sickmann with a laugh, and 40 years later the two are still together.
“For me, Veterans Day is thinking of those eight individuals that paid the ultimate sacrifice, their life, for my life. I now have three wonderful children, four grandchildren, and I can tell you that those individuals that died that morning of April 25 would never again be able to go fishing with their sons, walk their daughters down the aisle and hold their grandkids, as I have been able to do. I think about all those that have served, and especially those served giving their life for my life, how do you forget something like that?”
Ben Affleck and ‘Argo’
Sickmann and his wife were in Columbus, Ohio, in 2011 at a wedding when the father of the bride called him over and says, ‘Rocky, I want you to meet my sister, she’s a casting director out in LA, you never know maybe someday she’ll be able to help your son,’ who had grown with the dream of becoming a movie star.
“So what’s the chances three days later (the casting director) flies back out to LA, she’s emailing her friend asking her, ‘Hey, what are you working on?’ Her friend comes back and says she’s working with Ben Affleck, George Clooney, John Goodman and a cast of others about a hostage movie on the Iran hostages. And the girl we just met, she goes, ‘That’s interesting. I just met one of the hostages.’”
Just five days later Affleck — the director and star of the movie — had invited Rocky and his son, Spencer, to the set as well as the premier. Spencer was even in the movie briefly as an extra.
A stepping stone
Sickmann has been working with Folds of Honor since he retired in 2016, and the non-profit work as Senior VP of Budweiser accounts has been therapeutic for his downtime. It allows him to not only give back but also stay connected with those he used to work with. If anyone deserves to have his cake and eat it too, it’s someone like Sickmann.
That says, he still has his down moments. Being a hostage for 444 days and having eight people die trying to rescue you is a heavy load to handle and carry, but that’s why Sickmann tells his story every chance he gets. A psychiatrist once told him there are two ways he’d deal with the tragedy: keep it inside, but something’s going to cause you to break and one day talk about it, or use it as a stepping stone.
“Whenever I feel like I’m having a bad day, I think of those eight, and the man upstairs reminds me, ‘Would you rather be here having to catch a 6:30 a.m. flight, or would you rather be over in Iran where you had three rifles to the back of your head?’ ” he said. “If I can go through a mock firing squad, I can go through anything.”
This isn’t a story about golf – though Sickmann is frequently on the course for events and did make his first hole-in-one three years ago at Osage National Golf Resort in Lake of the Ozarks – it’s far more important. No matter where we fall on the political spectrum, we can all agree how important it is to take the time, not only on this one day a year, but to constantly remember and be thankful for those who served.
Said Sickmann: “Freedom does not come free, and these individuals are out there willing to sacrifice their lives and their years and we just can’t forget that.”
The US was led by Portland Trail Blazer star Damian Lillard (21 points, 5 assists), Phoenix Suns standout Devin Booker (16 points, 4 rebounds), Boston Celtics All-Star Jayson Tatum (14 points, 4 boards), and the San Antonio Spurs’ Keldon Johnson (13 points, 8 assists).
If the 12:40 a.m. ET tip was too early (or late) for you to watch, don’t worry — we have all the highlights from the big win for your viewing pleasure in the clip embedded below, courtesy of YouTubers Core Highlights TV.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BIOd3yEetpQ
Watch it to see all of the best moments from the US victory over Iran, hopefully a sign of things to come in medal play.
Team USA picks up its first victory in Tokyo with a blowout of Iran.
It was time for Team USA to step up and overcome adversity and that’s what they did. The American superstars dominated Iran to pick up their first win in the Olympics with a convincing 120-66 blowout that put them back on track in Tokyo. Damian Lillard led the way for Team USA with 21 points. For Iran, Mohammad Jamshidi and Hamed Haddadi notched 14 points a piece for a team-high.
Nets forward Kevin Durant (10 PTS, 4-8 FG) came six points shy of breaking Carmelo Anthony’s all-time scoring record of 336 points with the United States. This sets him up to break that record in the squad’s next contest versus the Czech Republic.
The defense was absolutely outstanding for Gregg Popovich’s team. They held Iran to only 37% shooting from the field. In the process, they piled up 10 steals and 11 blocks. Team USA also took great care of the ball, only turning the ball over six times. Notably, they didn’t turn over the ball at all in the fourth period.
If this team looks to finish the job, they must win every game on their schedule to win gold. The loss against France put them in this tough position. However, this isn’t a position the United States aren’t capable of surmounting. Only time will tell if the pressure will catch up to this Olympic squad.
Durant sounded off on what the US needs to do moving forward after the loss to France prior to this game. He said, “We just have to be smart because they’re calling the games tighter.” The 32-year-old was referring to the squad limiting their fouls on opposing teams. Foul trouble was the reason why France came back into the contest in their first matchup.
Portland Trail Blazers star Damian Lillard led all scorers with 21 points and 5 assists, while Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker added 16 points and 4 boards. On the Boston Celtics side of things, All-Star forward Jayson Tatum put up 14 points, 4 rebounds, 2 assists, a block, and a steal while shooting 5-of-11 from the floor, 2-of-7 from beyond the arc, and a perfect 2-of-2 from the free-throw line in 17 minutes of play off the bench.
“We played good defense for a long period of time, shared the ball throughout the game very, very, well, against a very hard-working Iranian team,” said USA coach Gregg Popovich to the media after the win.
Celtics Lab 58: Does a Bradley Beal trade make sense for Boston, and if not, what’s next? https://t.co/xTHvTfnESj
Now at 1-1 and alone in second place in Group A, USA next faces the Czech Republic (and potential Celtics trade target Tomas Satoransky) at 8 am ET on Saturday, July 31.
While it remains to be seen whether All-Star Celtics forward Jayson Tatum will be moved back into the starting lineup, one thing that USA needs to address is the lack of cohesion and clear-cut roles the somewhat awkwardly if exceptionally talented squad has lacked. That and getting the full team up to speed with playing by FIBA rules and adjusted to the local time and environment should help, but even still are expected to be favorites.
If you’re looking for ways to watch the action live, keep reading while we get you up to speed on the players who will take the court.
Celtics Lab 58: Does a Bradley Beal trade make sense for Boston, and if not, what’s next? https://t.co/xTHvTfnESj
Team USA will try to bounce back versus Iran after losing to France.
Team USA is back at it again in Tokyo. The red white and blue must bounce back after dropping their first Olympic game to France. Americans are beginning to lose hope in this team’s chances of winning gold this year. They have lost three of their last five games when including exhibitions. It will be up to Nets star Kevin Durant to lead the way after struggling with foul trouble last game.
Many of the players insisted that it was Gregg Popovich’s Spurs offense that interfered with the team’s chemistry. It’s going to be interesting what offense they resort to versus Iran. Iran sits at #12 on the recent power rankings, making them the easiest challenge the US will face.
In their first Olympic game, Iran fell to the Czech Republic. Behnam Yakhchali led the way with 23 points, but it wasn’t enough. This next contest between these two squads will show desperation.