2022 FIFA World Cup Group B

Group B of the 2022 FIFA World Cup took place from 21 to 29 November 2022. The group consisted of national association football teams from England, Iran, the United States and Wales. Both England and the United States progressed to the round of 16 undefeated. England won the group, winning two games and drawing the other, while the United States won one game and drew the other two. Iran finished the group third, having won a game, with Wales finishing fourth with a single point.

Initially noted for unusually containing four teams all ranked in the top 20 at the time of the tournament, as well as two teams within the same sovereign state and other geopolitical conflicts, various incidents relating to Qatar's ban on LGBTQ+ symbols affected the games on the first match day.

Teams

The teams were decided by the World Cup draw that took place on 1 April 2022.[1] The group was set to receive one team from each pot, which sorted all World Cup teams by position on the FIFA World Rankings.[1][2] The first team drawn was England, which secured qualification as a pot one team by winning Group I of UEFA qualification.[3] The second pot team, the United States, qualified by finishing third in CONCACAF qualification.[4] The third team was Iran, which won Group A of the AFC third round.[5] The final team was not known at the time of the draw, as it was the UEFA second round Path A winner. Wales defeated Ukraine 1–0 to qualify for this position.[6]

Group B was widely described as the "group of death" before the tournament.[7] It had the highest average FIFA ranking of any group,[8] and controversy given the political hostility between Iran and the United Kingdom, and between Iran and the United States.[9][10][11]

FIFA World Cup Group B draw[12]
Draw positionTeam[13]PotConfederationMethod of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
FIFA Rankings[14]
March 2022[nb 1]October 2022
B1  England1UEFAUEFA Group I winners15 November 202116th2018Winners (1966)55
B2  Iran3AFCAFC third round Group A winners27 January 20226th2018Group stage (1978, 1998, 2006, 2014, 2018)2120
B3  United States2CONCACAFCONCACAF third round third place30 March 202211th2014Third place (1930)1516
B4  Wales4[nb 2]UEFAUEFA second round Path A winners5 June 20222nd1958Quarter-finals (1958)18[nb 2]19

Notes

LGBT symbol incidents

Captains' armbands

Harry Kane in England's first match, wearing a FIFA "No discrimination" armband

England captain Harry Kane, Wales captain Gareth Bale, and several other European captains intended to wear OneLove rainbow armbands promoting acceptance and diversity during the World Cup; shortly before England's opening match (the first match to feature one of these nations), however, FIFA announced that players wearing these armbands would face "unlimited" sanctions, with a yellow card given at minimum.[15][16] The affected football associations said they would not put their players in this position, criticising FIFA for the ruling.[17][18][19] A spokesperson for Rishi Sunak, the British Prime Minister, also criticised FIFA for introducing player punishment for the armbands.[20] After the first United States match, and though the US had not been intending to wear the armband, Antony Blinken, the United States Secretary of State, described the ban as "concerning".[21]

At the England–Iran match, BBC pundit and former England women's team captain Alex Scott chose to wear a OneLove armband while being interviewed pitchside ahead of the match, a move that was praised on social media.[17][18] At the United States–Wales match, though she did not appear on screen, German ZDF broadcaster Claudia Neumann wore a rainbow armband and Pride shirt, later telling the Sport-Informations-Dienst that she wanted to set an example, lamenting that the captains would not be able to wear the armbands.[22] England would change their armband to one that simply read "no discrimination".[23] During England's second match, the Wembley Stadium arch, iconic of the team's home stadium, was lit up in rainbow colours.[16]

Other Pride items

Many Wales fans in attendance at their first match as part of the nation's official LGBTQ+ supporters group wore the group's rainbow Wales bucket hats. Women who had these hats, including former women's team captain Laura McAllister, were prohibited from entering the stadium with them; McAllister reported that the security officials told her it was "a banned symbol".[24] At the same match, American journalist Grant Wahl was reportedly detained for 25 minutes when attempting to enter the stadium wearing a Pride shirt, being told it was "political" and being asked if he was British; he said that FIFA later apologised to him and security allowed him to enter with the shirt.[25]

After the match, the Football Association of Wales confronted FIFA about the confiscation of the bucket hats, and FIFA entered talks with the Qatari Supreme Committee to discuss Qatar's commitment to make all fans welcome at the World Cup, also citing an incident of an American fan with a rainbow flag being harassed.[26]

Standings

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1  England321092+77Advanced to knockout stage
2  United States312021+15
3  Iran310247−33
4  Wales301216−51
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

In the round of 16:

  • The winners of Group B, England, advanced to play the runners-up of Group A, Senegal.
  • The runners-up of Group B, the United States, advanced to play the winners of Group A, the Netherlands.

Matches

Matches took place between 21 and 29 November 2022.[27] All times listed are local, AST (UTC+3).[27]

England vs Iran

The opening match of Group B was contested between England and Iran.[28] The two sides had never played each other in a competitive match.[29] Many England supporters missed the start of the match due to problems with FIFA's ticketing app.[30] In defiance of their government, the Iranian team refused to sing their national anthem ahead of the match, a sign of support for the Mahsa Amini protests in their own country.[31] Many Iranian women, some of them bearing protest signs, were in attendance at the match, a gesture which by itself was considered an act of protest as women are barred from football matches in Iran.[32]

The match was delayed for seven minutes in the first half after head to head collision between the Iranian goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand and defender Majid Hosseini.[33] Beiranvand initially seemed to be convinced to continue playing by Iran captain Ehsan Hajsafi despite appearing to be dazed and taking his gloves and shirt off after he received treatment, drawing criticism from the brain injury charity Headway.[34] After collapsing on the field minutes later, Beiranvand was substituted for Hossein Hosseini.[35] England scored three first-half goals: Jude Bellingham opened with his first ever senior England goal in the 35th minute, with Bukayo Saka (in the 43rd minute) and Raheem Sterling (in the first minute of stoppage time) being the other contributors to the scoreline up to this point.[36]

In the second half, England's Saka scored his second of the game in the 62nd minute, before Iran's Mehdi Taremi scored with their first shot on target.[36] England defender Harry Maguire was then removed from play after also suffering a head injury.[37] Substitute Marcus Rashford, who had been introduced a minute before, scored England's fifth goal with his third touch of the game.[36] Shortly into stoppage time, Jack Grealish scored England's sixth goal.[38] The final goal, a contentious penalty kick for Iran, was scored two-and-a-half minutes after the final whistle, awarded only after a review of a late-occurring foul was suggested by the VAR. Taremi converted from the penalty kick with the final score being 6–2.[39]

The Iranian media blamed the "humiliating" loss on the protests in their country affecting their players' mindset, additionally claiming that the United States and its allies, including the United Kingdom, had manufactured the protests to disrupt Iran; though these nations comprise all of Iran's group stage competition, the line of blame is common due to longstanding political tensions.[40] Iran manager Queiroz had supported protests by players prior to the tournament,[41] then said that such protests were "not welcomed" following the loss.[42]

England  6–2  Iran
Report
England
Iran
GK1Jordan Pickford
RB12Kieran Trippier
CB5John Stones
CB6Harry Maguire  70'
LB3Luke Shaw
CM22Jude Bellingham
CM4Declan Rice
RW17Bukayo Saka  70'
AM19Mason Mount  70'
LW10Raheem Sterling  70'
CF9Harry Kane (c)  75'
Substitutions:[note 1]
DF15Eric Dier  70'
FW11Marcus Rashford  70'
MF20Phil Foden  70'
FW7Jack Grealish  70'
FW24Callum Wilson  75'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate
GK1Alireza Beiranvand  20'
CB8Morteza Pouraliganji  48'
CB15Rouzbeh Cheshmi  46'
CB19Majid Hosseini
RWB2Sadegh Moharrami
LWB5Milad Mohammadi  63'
RM7Alireza Jahanbakhsh  25'  46'
CM21Ahmad Nourollahi  77'
CM18Ali Karimi  46'
LM3Ehsan Hajsafi (c)
CF9Mehdi Taremi
Substitutions:[note 1]
GK24Hossein Hosseini  20'
MF6Saeid Ezatolahi  46'
DF13Hossein Kanaanizadegan  46'
MF17Ali Gholizadeh  46'
MF16Mehdi Torabi  63'
FW20Sardar Azmoun  77'
Manager:
Carlos Queiroz

Man of the Match:
Bukayo Saka (England)[44]

Assistant referees:
Rodrigo Figueiredo (Brazil)
Danilo Simon Manis (Brazil)
Fourth official:
Kevin Ortega (Peru)
Reserve assistant referee:
Michael Orué (Peru)
Video assistant referee:
Leodán González (Uruguay)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Julio Bascuñán (Chile)
Martin Soppi (Uruguay)
Juan Martínez Munuera (Spain)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)

United States vs Wales

The teams had met twice previously, both in friendly matches: the United States won 2–0 in 2003 and the two teams drew 0–0 in 2020.[45] The game was broadcast on ITV in the United Kingdom, with the network announcing during the broadcast that its technical director, Roger Pearce, had died in Qatar.[46]

The United States scored the opening goal in the 32nd minute, when Timothy Weah scored after a pass over the top by Christian Pulisic.[47] The United States had the better of the chances in the first half, but in the second half Wales improved, particularly after introducing substitute Kieffer Moore.[48] In the second period, Wales had a chance to equalize through Ben Davies, but the header was saved. Wales would nonetheless eventually manage to score their first World Cup goal in 64 years, after Bale was fouled in the box by Walker Zimmerman and scored the resulting penalty kick himself. After over nine minutes of stoppage time,[49] the match finished 1–1, with the United States picking up four yellow cards, the most they had received in a World Cup game since their 2002 quarter-final against Germany.[48]

United States  1–1  Wales
Report
United States
Wales
GK1Matt Turner
RB2Sergiño Dest  11'  74'
CB3Walker Zimmerman
CB13Tim Ream  51'
LB5Antonee Robinson
DM4Tyler Adams (c)
CM8Weston McKennie  13'  66'
CM6Yunus Musah  74'
RF21Timothy Weah  88'
CF24Josh Sargent  74'
LF10Christian Pulisic
Substitutions:
FW11Brenden Aaronson  66'
FW19Haji Wright  74'
DF22DeAndre Yedlin  74'
MF23Kellyn Acosta  90+10'  74'
FW16Jordan Morris  88'
Manager:
Gregg Berhalter
GK1Wayne Hennessey
CB5Chris Mepham  45+2'
CB6Joe Rodon
CB4Ben Davies
DM15Ethan Ampadu  90+5'
CM10Aaron Ramsey
CM8Harry Wilson  90+3'
RW14Connor Roberts
LW3Neco Williams  79'
CF11Gareth Bale (c)  40'
CF20Daniel James  46'
Substitutions:
FW13Kieffer Moore  46'
FW9Brennan Johnson  79'
MF22Sorba Thomas  90+3'
MF16Joe Morrell  90+5'
Manager:
Rob Page

Man of the Match:
Gareth Bale (Wales)[50]

Assistant referees:
Taleb Al-Marri (Qatar)
Saud Al-Maqaleh (Qatar)
Fourth official:
Ma Ning (China)
Reserve assistant referee:
Cao Yi (China)
Video assistant referee:
Abdulla Al-Marri (Qatar)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Rédouane Jiyed (Morocco)
Mokrane Gourari (Algeria)
Adil Zourak (Morocco)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Elvis Noupue (Cameroon)

Wales vs Iran

During the match between Wales and Iran

Wales had faced Iran previously only once, a 1–0 friendly win in 1978.[51] The Iranian team opted to sing their national anthem at this match.

The game was driven by Iran in attack and quick counter-attack, with Wales mostly holding in defence; though Wales made attempts in attack, their midfield was described by BBC Sport's Dafydd Pritchard as "worryingly porous". In the first half, Iran had a goal from Ali Gholizadeh disallowed by VAR for offside. Early in the second half, Iran had two attempts hit each post in quick succession.[52] In the 86th minute, Welsh goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey was originally given a yellow card for a foul he committed outside his penalty area. However, following review by VAR, this was upgraded to a red card. Iran substitute Rouzbeh Cheshmi scored the match's first goal eight minutes into stoppage time, followed by Ramin Rezaeian scoring three minutes later to give Iran a first-ever win against a European team at the FIFA World Cup.[53] Cheshmi's goal was the latest-minute match-winning goal scored in any World Cup game (excluding extra time) since the 1966 FIFA World Cup in England, when exact goal times were first made available.[54] Officially, nine minutes of stoppage time were added; with further delays in the added time, over twelve minutes were actually played.[52]

Wales  0–2  Iran
Report
Wales
Iran
GK1Wayne Hennessey  86'
CB5Chris Mepham
CB6Joe Rodon  45+3'
CB4Ben Davies
DM15Ethan Ampadu  77'
CM10Aaron Ramsey  87'
CM8Harry Wilson  57'
RW14Connor Roberts  57'
LW3Neco Williams
CF11Gareth Bale (c)
CF13Kieffer Moore
Substitutions:
FW9Brennan Johnson  57'
FW20Daniel James  57'
MF7Joe Allen  77'
GK12Danny Ward  87'
Manager:
Rob Page
GK24Hossein Hosseini
RB23Ramin Rezaeian  90+5'
CB19Majid Hosseini
CB8Morteza Pouraliganji
LB5Milad Mohammadi
RM17Ali Gholizadeh  77'
CM6Saeid Ezatolahi  83'
CM21Ahmad Nourollahi  77'
LM3Ehsan Hajsafi (c)  77'
SS9Mehdi Taremi
CF20Sardar Azmoun  68'
Substitutions:
FW10Karim Ansarifard  68'
MF16Mehdi Torabi  77'
MF7Alireza Jahanbakhsh  90+5'  77'
DF15Rouzbeh Cheshmi  77'
MF18Ali Karimi  83'
Manager:
Carlos Queiroz

Man of the Match:
Rouzbeh Cheshmi (Iran)[55]

Assistant referees:
Caleb Wales (Trinidad and Tobago)
Juan Carlos Mora (Costa Rica)
Fourth official:
Maguette Ndiaye (Senegal)
Reserve assistant referee:
Djibril Camara (Senegal)
Video assistant referee:
Drew Fischer (Canada)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Fernando Guerrero (Mexico)
Nicolás Taran (Uruguay)
Adil Zourak (Morocco)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Bruno Pires (Brazil)

England vs United States

The sides had previously met twice in the World Cup: the United States famously won 1–0 in the 1950 tournament in Brazil, and the teams drew 1–1 in the 2010 edition in South Africa. Their most recent meeting was a 3–0 friendly victory for England in 2018.[56]

Harry Kane had a shot blocked in the box for England in the 9th minute, before United States midfielder Weston McKennie missed a shot in the six-yard box, and teammate Christian Pulisic hit the crossbar in the 32nd minute.[57] The match featured only a small number of chances, with only four shots on target between the two teams.[58][59] Despite avoiding defeat, many England fans booed the team after the match ended, expressing criticism of a perceived lacking performance.[60]

England  0–0  United States
Report
Attendance: 68,463
England
United States
GK1Jordan Pickford
RB12Kieran Trippier
CB5John Stones
CB6Harry Maguire
LB3Luke Shaw
CM22Jude Bellingham  68'
CM4Declan Rice
RW17Bukayo Saka  77'
AM19Mason Mount
LW10Raheem Sterling  68'
CF9Harry Kane (c)
Substitutions:
FW7Jack Grealish  68'
MF8Jordan Henderson  68'
FW11Marcus Rashford  77'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate
GK1Matt Turner
RB2Sergiño Dest  77'
CB3Walker Zimmerman
CB13Tim Ream
LB5Antonee Robinson
RM8Weston McKennie  77'
CM4Tyler Adams (c)
CM6Yunus Musah
LM10Christian Pulisic
CF21Timothy Weah  83'
CF19Haji Wright  83'
Substitutions:
FW11Brenden Aaronson  77'
DF18Shaq Moore  77'
FW7Giovanni Reyna  83'
FW24Josh Sargent  83'
Manager:
Gregg Berhalter

Man of the Match:
Christian Pulisic (United States)[61]

Assistant referees:
Jorge Urrego (Venezuela)
Tulio Moreno (Venezuela)
Fourth official:
Yoshimi Yamashita (Japan)
Reserve assistant referee:
Neuza Back (Brazil)
Video assistant referee:
Juan Soto (Venezuela)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Nicolás Gallo (Colombia)
Diego Bonfá (Argentina)
Julio Bascuñán (Chile)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Ezequiel Brailovsky (Argentina)

Wales vs England

The teams had met 103 times, most recently in a friendly game in 2020 won 3–0 by England. This was their second meeting in a major tournament, the first being the group stage of UEFA Euro 2016, which ended in a 2–1 win for England. The teams had met in multiple FIFA World Cup qualifiers, including two British Home Championship matches that served as World Cup qualifiers (in the 1949–50 British Home Championship and 1953–54 British Home Championship) as well as in the 1974 FIFA World Cup qualification – UEFA Group 5 and the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification – UEFA Group 6 tournaments.[62]

Marcus Rashford had the best chance of the opening period, but his chipped shot was saved by Wales goalkeeper Danny Ward. Following a goalless first half, Rashford scored a direct free kick in the 51st minute to give England the lead. Shortly after the restart, England would double the lead after Rashford won the ball in the Welsh defence and passed to Harry Kane, whose crossed ball low from the right was converted at the back post by Phil Foden. Rashford got his second of the game in the 68th minute, with a shot from deep inside the Welsh penalty area that went through the goalkeeper's legs.[63] The victory was enough for England to finish at the top of the group, whilst Wales finished at the bottom with just one point.[64]

Wales  0–3  England
Report
Wales
England
GK12Danny Ward
RB3Neco Williams  36'
CB5Chris Mepham
CB6Joe Rodon
LB4Ben Davies  57'
DM15Ethan Ampadu
CM10Aaron Ramsey  61'
CM7Joe Allen  81'
RF11Gareth Bale (c)  46'
CF13Kieffer Moore
LF20Daniel James  29'  77'
Substitutions:
DF14Connor Roberts  36'
FW9Brennan Johnson  46'
MF16Joe Morrell  57'
MF8Harry Wilson  77'
MF25Rubin Colwill  81'
Manager:
Rob Page
GK1Jordan Pickford
RB2Kyle Walker  57'
CB5John Stones
CB6Harry Maguire
LB3Luke Shaw  65'
DM4Declan Rice  57'
CM8Jordan Henderson
CM22Jude Bellingham
RF20Phil Foden
CF9Harry Kane (c)  57'
LF11Marcus Rashford  75'
Substitutions:
DF18Trent Alexander-Arnold  57'
FW24Callum Wilson  57'
MF14Kalvin Phillips  57'
DF12Kieran Trippier  65'
FW7Jack Grealish  75'
Manager:
Gareth Southgate

Man of the Match:
Marcus Rashford (England)[65]

Assistant referees:
Tomaž Klančnik (Slovenia)
Andraž Kovačič (Slovenia)
Fourth official:
Yoshimi Yamashita (Japan)
Reserve assistant referee:
Karen Díaz Medina (Mexico)
Video assistant referee:
Marco Fritz (Germany)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Paolo Valeri (Italy)
Paweł Sokolnicki (Poland)
Bastian Dankert (Germany)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Vasile Marinescu (Romania)

Iran vs United States

The teams had met twice previously: Iran won 2–1 during the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France, and the teams drew 1–1 in a 2000 friendly.[66] Prior to the match, the United States Soccer Federation displayed the flag of Iran on social media without the emblem of the country. The removal of the emblem showed support for the women in Iran fighting for basic human rights, according to the Federation.[67] In response, Iranian state media reported that the United States should be immediately removed from the tournament and suspended for ten games for a "distorted image" of the country's flag.[68][69] Following this, the emblem was returned to the flag.[70]

Both teams were guaranteed qualification to the round of 16 with a win, whilst Iran would qualify with a draw, provided Wales did not defeat England.[71] Christian Pulisic scored the only goal of the game for the United States in the 38th minute, being injured in the process.[72][73] The United States thus advanced to the round of 16 as group runners-up with five points, whilst England finished top of the group with seven.[74]

Iran  0–1  United States
Report
Attendance: 42,127
Iran
United States
GK1Alireza Beiranvand
RB23Ramin Rezaeian
CB19Majid Hosseini  77'
CB8Morteza Pouraliganji
LB5Milad Mohammadi  45+2'
RM17Ali Gholizadeh  77'
CM6Saeid Ezatolahi
CM21Ahmad Nourollahi  71'
LM3Ehsan Hajsafi (c)  71'
SS9Mehdi Taremi
CF20Sardar Azmoun  46'
Substitutions:
MF18Ali Karimi  45+2'
MF14Saman Ghoddos  46'
MF16Mehdi Torabi  71'
DF25Abolfazl Jalali  90+6'  71'
FW10Karim Ansarifard  77'
Other disciplinary actions:
DF13Hossein Kanaanizadegan[note 2]  83'
Manager:
Carlos Queiroz
GK1Matt Turner
RB2Sergiño Dest  82'
CB20Cameron Carter-Vickers
CB13Tim Ream
LB5Antonee Robinson
DM4Tyler Adams (c)  43'
CM6Yunus Musah
CM8Weston McKennie  65'
RF21Timothy Weah  82'
CF24Josh Sargent  77'
LF10Christian Pulisic  46'
Substitutions:
FW11Brenden Aaronson  46'
MF23Kellyn Acosta  65'
FW19Haji Wright  77'
DF18Shaq Moore  82'
DF3Walker Zimmerman  82'
Manager:
Gregg Berhalter

Man of the Match:
Christian Pulisic (United States)[75]

Assistant referees:
Pau Cebrián Devís (Spain)
Roberto Díaz Pérez del Palomar (Spain)
Fourth official:
Kevin Ortega (Peru)
Reserve assistant referee:
Jesús Sánchez (Peru)
Video assistant referee:
Juan Martínez Munuera (Spain)
Assistant video assistant referees:
Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea (Spain)
Neuza Back (Brazil)
Alejandro Hernández Hernández (Spain)
Stand-by assistant video assistant referee:
Bruno Pires (Brazil)

Discipline

Fair play points would have been used as tiebreakers if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows:[74]

  • first yellow card: −1 point;
  • indirect red card (second yellow card): −3 points;
  • direct red card: −4 points;
  • yellow card and direct red card: −5 points;

Only one of the above deductions was applied to a player in a single match.

TeamMatch 1Match 2Match 3Points
           
 England0
 United States41−5
 Iran223−7
 Wales2112−9

See also

Notes

References

External links