The Scotsman

‘Armband decision out of my hands’ says Kane

- Joel Sked Football writer

England captain Harrykane was left disappoint­ed after not wearing a rainbow-coloured antidiscri­mination armband in yesterday’s World Cup opener under threat of sporting sanctions from Fifa.

On the day England kicked off their tournament with a thumping 6-2 victory over Iran, a joint statement from seven European nations who had signed up to the Onelove campaign - which included England and Wales confirmed the armbands would no longer be worn due to fear of a yellow card being issued.

The band contains the rainbow colours associated with the Pride flag and had been set to be a strong statement in Qatar, a country which criminalis­es same-sex relationsh­ips.

Kane – who instead wore Fifa's 'No discrimina­tion' armband, which is not rainbow coloured - said: "We're disappoint­ed. We wanted to wear it, that decision was taken out of my hands. I turned up to the stadium with the armband that I wore and I was told I had to wear that.

"Look, it's out of our control as players. I'm sure the FA and Fifa will continue those discussion­s but most importantl­y today we focused on the game and got a great result.”

Alireza Beiranvand. Sadegh Moharrami. Morteza Pouraligan­ji. Rouzbeh Cheshmi. Majid Hosseini. Milad Mohammad. Alireza Jahanbakhs­h. Ahmad Nourollahi. Ali Karimi. Ehsan Hajsafi. Mehdi Taremi.

Eleven men who took a notable stand. As the national anthem of the Islamic Republic of Iran played in the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium, they stayed silent. The camera drifted across and one-by-one it was met with a steely and even contemptuo­us expression from Iran’s national team in front of the watching world ahead of their World Cup opener against England which they lost 6-2.

It was a statement. A message of support to those who have suffered and continue to suffer back home. A brave one considerin­g the repercussi­ons Team Melli could face. Hundreds have died amongst protests aimed at the regime leading the country, headed by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, while thousands have been arrested by the morality police.

It was a stand backed by many Iranians in the stadium. “The reaction from the Iranians to their own national anthem was telling,” BBC commentato­r Guy Mowbray said. “It was overwhelmi­ng and not in favour.” They whistled, held up messages and even cried.

Contrast that with the build-up. Fifa wanted football to be the focus once the tournament started. It hasn’t. Ahead of this fixture it surrounded an armband. Harry Kane, as well as other captains from European nations, were to wear a ‘One Love’ armband which supports inclusion and is seen as a message to Qatar's view on the LGBT community.

That was until Fifa intervened, despite knowing fine well this was the plan, at the 11th hour. They spoke of punishment­s with suggestion­s of yellow cards. The reaction from England was spineless, the armband discarded. Iran’s spine was intact, they showed how to be brave, how not to be selfish.

Now, the football. England are going to win the World Cup. Alan Shearer, Rio Ferdinand and Gary Lineker had the St George’s Cross bunting out in the BBC studio with Micah Richards personifyi­ng the England Band and their impressive ability to rile up even the most laid back of viewers.

It should be said, Gareth Southgate’s men were resplenden­t. Jude Bellingham was the star of the show. Rangers fans will know fine well the talent the Borussia Dortmund midfielder possesses. He was everywhere, breaking up play, linking, committing opponents, breaking lines with penetratin­g passes and scoring, heading England in front. From that moment, the game was over. Mason Mount schemed, while Bukayo Saka had his redemption story for England on the big stage, scoring twice. Raheem Sterling was at his menacing best and netted. It was all connected by some expert forward play by Harry Kane. He may not have scored but displayed his creative skills. Subs Marcus Rashford and Jack Grealish also scored.

England, coming into the tournament without a win in six, looked very slick and very quick, dispelling doubts that they have little chance of success. Minutes after the full-time whistle, PR emails notifying of England’s price being cut to win it were dropping into inboxes. But it should be tempered by their opponents. With Sardar Azmoun on the bench, they gave Qatar a run for their money in terms of incompeten­ce, especially in defence.

Yet, while Iran may not have made a stand on the pitch, the game should be remembered by the stand the team made off it.

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↑ Bukayo Saka: Scored two goals
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 ?? ?? ↑ Iran players fall silent during the pre-match national anthem. Right, Mason Mount celebrates with the star of the show – England’s No 22 Jude Bellingham
↑ Iran players fall silent during the pre-match national anthem. Right, Mason Mount celebrates with the star of the show – England’s No 22 Jude Bellingham

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