Crowds of Iranian football fans gave Cristiano Ronaldo a rapturous welcome on Monday as his Saudi Arabia team arrived in Tehran for the first home-and-away club tie since the two countries resumed diplomatic relations.
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Fans chanted the name of the Portuguese five-time world player of the year as he arrived with his Al Nassr teammates to face Iranian club Persepolis in the Asian Champions League on Tuesday. The match will be the first since Tehran and Riyadh reached a China-brokered deal announced in March.
Teams from both countries had only played matches on neutral grounds since 2016 when Saudi Arabia and Iran severed ties.
In Tehran, excitement filled the air as fans eagerly waited to catch a glimpse of Cristiano Ronaldo as he left Iran’s Imam Khomeini’s airport. Large crowds of cheering fans lined the streets as Cristiano Ronaldo and his team arrived at a hotel in Tehran on board a bus.
Others chanting “Ronaldo, Ronaldo!” even flooded into the hotel lobby.
Posters of Cristiano Ronaldo sprung up across the Iranian capital’s main streets emblazoned with “Welcome”, written in Arabic, English, and Farsi.
“I think it will be a beautiful game and will have a lot of excitement,” said 28-year-old Navid Borhanifar, a Cristiano Ronaldo fan. “It’s very exciting for me.”
Sadly for the fans, none will be allowed to attend the match which will be held at the gigantic Azadi stadium, which can host up to 90,000 people.
The Asian Football Confederation have ruled that the game be played behind closed doors as punishment for a controversial 2021 online post by Persepolis before a match against an Indian team.
‘Unlimited internet’
Cristiano Ronaldo and his teammates have been placed under the protection of an “elite unit”, specialised in securing presidential visits, according to sports website Varzesh 3.
The unit will be in charge of “preventing any contact between fans and players of the Saudi team,” it added.
Cristiano Ronaldo’s arrival has also sparked a debate over Iran’s internet restrictions.
Iran has imposed strict internet curbs — including on WhatsApp and Instagram — since last year’s mass protests triggered by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini.
Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, had been arrested for allegedly violating the Islamic republic’s dress code for women.
Last week, Persepolis’s general manager Reza Darvish proposed that the Saudi team be given SIM cards with unfiltered internet access.
“I have talked to the CEO of Irancell (a local provider and sponsor to Persepolis) and asked for SIM cards for… players and those who accompany them with unlimited internet,” he said in a press conference.
The 2023-2024 Asian Champions League officially begins this week with the spotlight on Saudi Arabia which alongside Cristiano Ronaldo has lured a host of stars including Karim Benzema, Neymar and Sadio Mane.
Persepolis are one of the region’s most successful clubs and reached the final of the Asian Champions League in 2018 and 2020, while Al Nassr won the tournament in 1995.
Other matches between the two countries will take place in the coming weeks. Saudi’s Al Ittihad are scheduled to play Iran’s Sepahan on October 2, and Saudi club Al Hilal are scheduled to meet Iran’s Nassaji Mazandaran on October 3.
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