Hooligan Soccer
·26 maggio 2026
FIFA Confirms Iran Will Set Up Camp in Mexico

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Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·26 maggio 2026

Just a few miles from San Diego sits Tijuana, one of the busiest border cities between Mexico and the United States. Home of Liga MX side Club Tijuana, the city probably never imagined it would become part of the World Cup conversation — let alone host one of the 48 national teams heading to the biggest tournament on the planet.
But here we are.
FIFA officially unveiled the training base camps for all 48 teams competing at the 2026 World Cup and confirmed that Iran will move its operations from the United States to Mexico during the tournament.
The Asian side will now be headquartered at the Centro Xoloitzcuintle training complex in Tijuana, the home base of the Xolos.
Iran is scheduled to play group-stage matches in Los Angeles against New Zealand and Belgium, while also traveling to Seattle to face Egypt.
The move was first announced Saturday by Mehdi Taj, president of the Iranian Football Federation, who revealed that FIFA had approved the relocation from the United States to Mexico.
According to Taj, Iran had originally planned to stay in Tucson, Arizona, but the ongoing uncertainty surrounding tensions in the Middle East and broader security concerns pushed federation officials to reconsider. Staff at Tucson’s Kino Sports Complex declined to comment on the situation, perhaps wisely choosing to stay out of geopolitics for the weekend.
Instead, Iran will operate out of Tijuana, just south of San Diego, during a World Cup that runs from June 11 through July 19 and will be jointly hosted by the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
“All team base camps for participating countries must be approved by FIFA,” Taj explained. “Fortunately, after the requests we submitted and the meetings we held with FIFA and World Cup officials in Istanbul — plus a virtual meeting in Tehran with FIFA’s secretary general — our request to move the team base from the United States to Mexico was accepted.”
Iran, making its fourth consecutive World Cup appearance and seventh overall, is still searching for its first trip beyond the group stage. Maybe a little Mexican hospitality — and some carne asada tacos — will finally do the trick.
The Iranian federation also noted that relocating to Mexico could help avoid potential visa complications, since the team would enter the United States through Mexico. Taj even mentioned the possibility of the squad flying in and out of the country using Iran Air (which has not flown into the U.S. since 1979).
Base camps serve as the teams’ operational headquarters during the tournament, where players train, recover, and attempt to avoid answering the same media questions for five straight weeks.
So, which countries will be calling Mexico home during the 2026 World Cup?
Complete list of 2026 World Cup base camps:
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