She Kicks Magazine
·13 April 2026
Steph Catley’s name and image used without permission in Iran legal battle

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Yahoo sportsShe Kicks Magazine
·13 April 2026

Arsenal Women defender and Australian captain Steph Catley has reportedly had her name, photograph and playing profile used without consent in documents filed as part of an Iranian legal dispute.
The case is said to involve Iran women’s football and raises immediate questions about image rights and player identity protections.
According to reports, Catley has no actual connection to the Iranian proceedings beyond her image and reputation allegedly being inserted into the filing.
That alone makes it a striking story for both Matildas and WSL followers.
Per a report by the Daily Mail, court papers in Iran allegedly used Catley’s image, name and career details in a case linked to the women’s national team.
The reporting suggests her profile was presented as part of an argument around footballing value or “assets”, despite there being no public evidence that Catley had agreed to any such use.
That “assets” wording appears to refer not to property in the ordinary sense, but to the value attached to a player’s identity, profile and professional standing.
In plain terms, one of the game’s most recognisable left-backs was reportedly folded into a domestic legal argument without permission.
At the time of writing, the underlying court material has not been independently verified by She Kicks. For that reason, the details should be treated with caution, even if the central allegation is clear enough.
Catley’s appearance in the case seems to rest on visibility. She is the captain of Australia, a senior figure at Arsenal Women, and one of the best-known players in the women’s game.
That makes her a high-profile image to attach to any football-related filing, even where the connection is apparently nonexistent.
The wider context matters too. Iran women’s football has been under intense scrutiny since the turmoil around the national team during the Asian Cup in Australia, a story She Kicks has followed closely in its coverage of the Iran women football team and the asylum fallout.
Against that backdrop, this latest legal dispute adds another layer to a programme already surrounded by political and institutional pressure.
For Catley, it also lands at a point when her profile is especially prominent, both for club and country.
Her standing with Arsenal has been in focus in recent months, as shown in her recent thoughts on squad competition at Arsenal, while her role with the Matildas continues to carry weight well beyond Australia, including in broader debates such as the Matildas Asian Cup pay gap.
No formal public response from Catley, Arsenal Women or Football Australia was available at the time of writing. There has also been no confirmation, in the reporting currently available, of any legal action taken on Catley’s behalf in response to the alleged use of her likeness.
That leaves the story in a familiar but awkward space: the allegation is serious, the reported documents are specific, but the official response is still limited. Until that changes, caution is required on every detail beyond the core claim that her image was reportedly used without consent.
This is a niche case, but it points to a bigger issue. As the women’s game grows, player identity has commercial, legal and reputational value of its own, and those protections do not become less important just because the dispute sits outside the usual transfer or sponsorship landscape.
It also shows how quickly football can become entangled with wider institutional struggles.
In this instance, a legal dispute touching Iran women’s football has reportedly pulled in the name of an Arsenal Women and Matildas captain who had no direct involvement. That is a small detail with a big footprint.
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