Nov. 20, 2022 coverage of the World Cup

- Source: CNN " data-fave-thumbnails="{"big": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/221111140225-diego-maradona-hand-of-god-ball.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" }, "small": { "uri": "https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/221111140225-diego-maradona-hand-of-god-ball.jpg?c=16x9&q=h_540,w_960,c_fill" } }" data-vr-video="false" data-show-html="" data-byline-html="
" data-timestamp-html="" data-check-event-based-preview="" data-is-vertical-video-embed="false" data-network-id="" data-publish-date="2022-11-15T11:47:17Z" data-video-section="sport" data-canonical-url="https://www.cnn.com/videos/sports/2022/11/15/diego-maradona-ball-for-sale-hand-of-god-spt-intl-lon-orig.cnn" data-branding-key="football" data-video-slug="diego-maradona-ball-for-sale-hand-of-god-spt-intl-lon-orig" data-first-publish-slug="diego-maradona-ball-for-sale-hand-of-god-spt-intl-lon-orig" data-video-tags="auctions,diego maradona,fifa,fifa world cup,football (soccer),soccer events,sports and recreation,sports events,sports figures,sports organizations and teams" data-details="">
TOPSHOT - The match ball used in the 1986 FIFA World Cup Quarter-Final football match between Argentina and England, played at the Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, is pictured during a photocall ahead of its auction, at Wembley Stadium in London on November 1, 2022. - The ball that Diego Maradona used to score his infamous "Hand of God" World Cup goal for Argentina against England in 1986 will go under the hammer on November 16, and could fetch up to £3 million. The 1986 quarter-final between Argentina and England saw a heated build-up because of political tensions following the Falklands war and came to be defined by two contrasting goals scored by the late Maradona. (Photo by ISABEL INFANTES / AFP) (Photo by ISABEL INFANTES/AFP via Getty Images)
Diego Maradona's 'Hand of God' ball up for sale
02:38 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Ecuador defeated Qatar, 2-0, in the first match of the 2022 World Cup at the Al Bayt Stadium.
  • Thirty-two teams are competing in the tournament that runs until the World Cup Final on Dec. 18.
  • On Monday, there will be three matches: England vs. Iran, Senegal vs. The Netherlands and USA vs. Wales. Click here for the full schedule.
  • This World Cup makes history as the first held in the Middle East, but it’s also mired in controversy. In a lengthy news conference Saturday, FIFA’s president slammed Western criticism of Qatar’s human rights record.
26 Posts

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the World Cup 2022 opener here.

The best photos from the World Cup opener

Ecuador celebrates after Enner Valencia scored on a penalty shot.

Take a look at photos from the opening match, where Ecuador defeated host nation Qatar 2-0.

Fans watch Sunday's match from a fan zone in Doha, Qatar.
Valencia slots a penalty past Qatari goalkeeper Saad Al Sheeb to open the scoring in the 16th minute.
A family watches the opening match from their home in Doha.
Valencia thought he scored the opening goal in the third minute of Sunday's match. But after video review, Valencia's header was disallowed as it was deemed that an Ecuador player was offside in the buildup.

See more of the best photos from the 2022 World Cup.

Ecuador's president celebrates World Cup match victory

Ecuador’s president Guillermo Lasso tweeted in support of his country’s victory in the World Cup opening match against host Qatar on Sunday.

“When we Ecuadorians find ourselves inspired and prepared like the players of the soccer team, we can build all the victories we dream of. This is the true national encounter. Let’s keep going @LaTri, the whole of Ecuador supports you,” he tweeted.?

He went on to tweet, “ECUADOR MAKES HISTORY! When leadership is clear, has a vision, and works to achieve it, it makes history as TRI!”

Ecuador defeats Qatar in World Cup opener, 2-0

Ecuador's Enner Valencia celebrates with teammates after scoring the opening goal from the penalty spot.

The host nation of World Cup 2022, Qatar, was bested in its debut, losing to Ecuador 2-0.

Ecuador did all its scoring in the first half. And it was Enner Valencia who netted both goals for La Tri. Valencia converted a penalty in the 15th minute. Then he got his second later in the half, with an elegant header that found the bottom left corner of Qatar’s goal.

With his two goals, Valencia became his country’s all-time leading scorer, with 37 goals in 75 national team appearances.

The South American country has now won eight straight international matches and 15 of its last 16.

The hosts struggled to come up with offense in the match. Qatar fired five shots at Ecuador’s goal with none hitting the target.

Prior to Sunday, no host nation had lost its World Cup opening match in the previous 21 editions of the tournament.

Next up for Ecuador is the Netherlands on Friday. Qatar will meet Senegal in its second group stage match, on Friday as well.

Here are the matches slated for tomorrow at World Cup 2022:

  • England vs. Iran
  • Senegal vs. Netherlands
  • USA vs. Wales

Click here for the full schedule.

Empty seats as Ecuador dominates Qatar with ease?

Spectators leave Al Bayt Stadium before the end of the Qatar-Ecuador match.

All the excitement pre-match is slowly draining away from the stadium and there are noticeably more empty seats than in the first half.?

Qatar has looked particularly nervous throughout and can’t seem to string any passes together. It seems like the occasion got to be too much for them, and some fans have had enough.?

We still have the Ecuadorian contingent making a lot of noise in their striking yellow shirts as they try, over and over, to start “the wave.” Qatar’s fans don’t seem up for it, though.?

Captain and goalscorer Enner Valencia has been notably better than anyone else on the pitch. This appears to be fading away into a comfortable Ecuador win.

Can the hosts mount a comeback? Judging by what I’ve seen so far, I wouldn’t count on it.

Ecuador coasting with a 2-0 lead in the 2nd half

Qatar's Pedro Miguel challenges Ecuador's Pervis Estupi?án for the ball.

Ecuador maintains its two-goal advantage over Qatar more than halfway through the second half.

La Tri has been in control the whole match. Ecuador has taken five shots, with three of them on goal.

Qatar has struggled to create offense in their first-ever World Cup match. The hosts have managed just three shots, none on goal.

Ecuador 2, Qatar 0.

Second half begins in the World Cup opener between Ecuador and Qatar

Ecuador fans are seen inside the stadium.

The second half has begun in the opening match of the 2022 World Cup featuring Ecuador and host country Qatar.

Ecuador takes a 2-0 lead over Qatar into the second half. No host country has lost a World Cup opener (16 wins, 6 draws, 2002 had two hosts). Ecuador is unbeaten in its last seven matches (2 wins, 5 draws).

Qatar is making its World Cup debut.?Ecuador?is making its fourth World Cup appearance.

Ecuador is rolling. Up 2-0 over Qatar at the half

Ecuador celebrates after Enner Valencia scored on a penalty kick in the first half.

Ecuador is dominating the host country in the opening match of the 2022 World Cup.

Ecuador appeared to take a very early lead when they found the back of the Qatar net in the 3rd minute. But the goal was ruled out after a check by the video-assisted referee (VAR) deemed an Ecuadorian player offside.

La Tri was not deterred by the call, however. In the 15th minute, Ecuador’s Enner Valencia won a penalty when he was taken down in the box by the Qatar goaltender, Saad Al Sheeb. Valencia stepped up to the spot and converted the penalty, giving his squad a 1-0 lead.

Just a quarter-hour later, Valencia scored his second of the match in the 31st minute with a glancing header into the bottom left corner of Qatar’s net.

Ecuador goes into the break in the opening match up 2-0 on the hosts.

Ecuador makes it 2-0 over Qatar in the 1st half

Ecuador's Enner Valencia celebrates scoring the team's second goal.

Ecuador’s Enner Valencia got his second goal of the match with a glancing header into the bottom left corner of Qatar’s net.

Ecuador now has a commanding lead over the host country. They lead Qatar 2-0 in the first half.

Ecuador takes the lead 1-0 on a penalty

Ecuador's Enner Valencia scores the team's first goal from the?penalty?spot.

Ecuador was awarded a penalty in the 15th minute of the opening match against Qatar.

Enner Valencia converted from the spot with a right-footed shot to the bottom right corner to give Ecuador the early 1-0 lead against the host country.

Ecuador has an early goal ruled out

Ecuador's Enner Valencia scores a goal that was later disallowed.

Ecuador appeared to take the lead against Qatar inside of 3 minutes.

But after a check by the video-assisted referee (VAR), an Ecuador player was ruled offside and the goal was disallowed.

FIFA World Cup kicks off with Qatar vs Ecuador match

Qatar fans cheer inside Al Bayt Stadium.

The match at the Al Bayt Stadium between Qatar and Ecuador has begun.

The stadium, which has a capacity of 60,000, is in Al Khor City, which is about 35 kilometers (18 miles) from central Doha.

Host nation Qatar is making its World Cup debut.?Ecuador?is making its fourth World Cup appearance.

No host country has lost a World Cup opener (16 wins, 6 draws, 2002 had two hosts). Ecuador is unbeaten in its last seven matches (2 wins, 5 draws).

The?29-day tournament is the first FIFA World Cup to be held in the Middle East.

The 22nd edition of?football’s flagship event?concludes Dec. 18.

Large section of empty seats suddenly filled with Qatar fans

A large section of seats behind one of the goals was suddenly filled with fans wearing matching Qatar shirts and scarves.?

The group, which consists of a few hundred, is being orchestrated by a leader at the front who is getting them to chant, dance and sing.

The large screens around the stadium are focusing heavily on that section, with fans all linking arms and jumping in unity, while a drummer provides the beat.?

It appears that a section of the stadium was specially saved for them.

They are making a lot more noise than the other fans around them and they are giving the Ecuador contingent a run for their money at the opposite end of the pitch.?

Morgan Freeman and flying mascots star in frantic World Cup opening ceremony?

A general view of the World Cup opening ceremony.

Of all the people you’d expect to appear at the opening of a World Cup ceremony, Morgan Freeman probably isn’t high on your list.?

And yet the American actor played a starring role as Qatar 2022 got underway, delivering a speech on unity.

Actor Morgan Freeman appears with Qatari YouTuber Ghanim al Muftah.

The ceremony raced at breakneck speed through multiple dance troupes, drumming performances and popular music from all four corners of the world.?

Fans were still filtering in as those already in their seats were treated to yet more light shows and massive projections on the field.

The biggest cheer, though, seemed to be saved for a giant flying La’eeb – the popular mascot of this year’s World Cup.?

World Cup mascot La'eeb is seen during the opening ceremony.

Less than an hour before kickoff now and there are still some empty seats inside the stadium, but that will surely change as the traffic outside starts to thin.?

Thousands of Ecuadorian fans are making the loudest noise behind one of the goals as players enter the pitch for their warmups.?

2022 FIFA World Cup opening ceremony begins

People inside the stadium watch the World Cup opening ceremony.

The opening ceremony of the 2022 FIFA World Cup has begun at Al Bayt Stadium in Al Khor, Qatar.

South Korean star and Qatari singer Fahad Al Kubaisi will perform?“Dreamers”?during the 30-minute show.?FIFA World Cup Ambassador?Ghanim Al Muftah and the Qatari singer Dana Al Fardan are set to encourage dialogue on inclusion and diversity, according to organizers.

The opening animation featured famed actor Morgan Freeman’s voice. Freeman appeared in person during the ceremony.

The theme of the ceremony is “a gathering for all mankind, bridging differences through humanity, respect and inclusion.”

That comes against a backdrop of controversies surrounding Qatar’s human rights record.

Fans sing and dance before taking their seats inside the stunning Al Bayt Stadium

The first match at this year’s World Cup is being played at the newly-built Al Bayt Stadium.

The 60,000-capacity venue is stunning – an architectural triumph that takes its name and design from the traditional tents historically used in the country.

But the stadium sits 40 kilometers (about 25 miles) north of Doha, and getting there requires leaving the bright lights behind and entering the desert terrain.

There is no metro station nearby, so fans, media and officials are all getting here by road. That, of course, has led to heavy congestion on the one road leading to the stadium, but fans don’t seem to care.?

Qatari and Ecuadorian supporters gather in groups to sing songs and pose for pictures before entering the stadium and taking their seats.?

There also seems to be a large contingent of Mexican, Argentinian and even German fans who are joining in the celebrations.?

Once fans get to their seats, they are treated to light shows and pumping music, as the atmosphere builds ahead of a World Cup like no other.?

These men helped build Qatar’s World Cup. Now they are struggling to survive

Workers walk to the Lusail Stadium, one of the 2022 World Cup stadiums, in Lusail, Qatar, on December 20, 2019.

Kamal was standing outside a shop with other migrant workers, having finished yet another grueling working day, when he and – he says – a few others were arrested this August. Without explanation, the 24-year-old says he was put into a vehicle and, for the next week, kept in a Qatari jail, the location and name of which he does not know.

Kamal – CNN has changed the names of the Nepali workers to protect them from retaliation – is one of many migrant workers wanting to tell the world of their experiences in Qatar, a country that will this month host one of sport’s greatest, most lucrative, spectacles – the?World Cup,?a tournament which usually unites the world as millions watch the spectacular goals and carefully-choreographed celebrations.

It will be a historic event, the first World Cup to be held in the Middle East, but one also mired in controversy. Much of the build-up to this tournament has been on more sober matters, that of human rights, from the deaths of migrant workers and the conditions many have endured in Qatar, to LGBTQ and women’s rights.

Kamal says he has yet to be paid the 7,000 Qatari Riyal bonus (around $1,922) he says he is entitled to from his previous employers, nor 7,000 Riyal in insurance for injuring two fingers at work.

“I wasn’t told why I was being arrested. People are just standing there … some are walking with their grocery [sic], some are just sitting there consuming tobacco products … they just arrest you,” he adds, before explaining he could not ask questions as he does not speak Arabic.

To read more about the migrant workers in Qatar, click here.

"You will survive" without a beer,?FIFA chief tells fans after ban on alcohol sales in?World?Cup?stadiums

FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks during a press conference on November 19, in Doha, Qatar.

FIFA’s chief told fans that they can make it through three hours without a beer after a last-minute ban on the sale of alcohol in stadiums at the Qatar?World?Cup?was announced on Friday.??

Addressing journalists at a press conference in Doha on Saturday, FIFA President Gianni Infantino stressed “every decision that is taken in this?World?Cup?is a joint decision between Qatar and FIFA.”?

Infantino pointed to the more than 10 fan zones where he said over 100,000 people will be able to simultaneously drink alcohol in Qatar.?

Infantino stressed that FIFA “tried until the end to see whether it was possible” to facilitate alcohol sales in stadiums,?in an attempt to account for the last-minute nature of Friday’s announcement.?

Infantino added that FIFA’s partnership with beer company Budweiser will continue into 2026 as planned, saying, “partners are partners in good and bad times, in difficult and easy times.”

FIFA president slammed "hypocrisy" of Western criticism ahead of World Cup

FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks at a press conference in Doha, Qatar, on November 19.

On Saturday, the eve of the?2022 World Cup in Qatar, FIFA President Gianni Infantino launched a tirade against Western critics of the?controversial tournament in an explosive, hour-long monologue.

Infantino, the boss of world soccer’s governing body, looked on glumly as he addressed hundreds of journalists in Doha, Qatar, Saturday.

Infantino barely spoke about soccer and focused his attention on what he called the “hypocrisy” of Western criticism.

In a remarkable press conference, Infantino seemed exhausted. He has spent a lot of time defending FIFA’s decision in 2010 to award the World Cup to Qatar, a controversial decision made when he wasn’t the governing body’s president.

This tournament will be a historic event, the first World Cup to be held in the Middle East, but is also mired in controversy, with much of the buildup focusing on human rights, from the death of migrant workers and the conditions many have endured in Qatar, to LGBTQ and women’s rights.

Infantino, despite admitting things weren’t perfect, said some criticism was “profoundly unjust” and accused the West of double standards.

The Italian opened the news conference by speaking for an hour, telling journalists that he knew what it felt like to be discriminated against, saying he was bullied as a child for having red hair and freckles.

“I feel this, all this, because what I’ve been seeing and what I’ve been told, since I don’t read, otherwise I would be depressed I think,” he said.

Read more here.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino attends a press conference at the Qatar National Convention Center (QNCC) in Doha on November 19, 2022, ahead of the Qatar 2022 World Cup football tournament. - Infantino hit back at Western critics of Qatar's human rights record at his opening press conference of the World Cup on November 19, blasting their "hypocrisy". (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP) (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article 'Crass' and an 'insult'. FIFA president criticized for speech on Qatar's human rights ahead of World Cup | CNN

Here's a breakdown of the Qatar and Ecuador squads playing today's opening match

The home team

Manager: Félix Sánchez

Goalkeepers: Saad Al-Sheeb, Meshaal Barsham, Yousef Hassan

Defenders: Pedro Miguel, Abdul Karim Hassan, Tarek Salman, Bassam Al-Rawi, Khoukhi Boualem, Abdelkarim Hassan, Ismaeel Mohammad, Homam Al Amin, Jassem Jaber

Midfielders: Ali Asad, Muhammad Waad, Salem Al Hajri, Assim Madibo, Mustafa Meshaal, Karim Boudiaf, Abdulaziz Hatin

Forwards: Naif Al Hadhrami, Hassan Al Haydos, Akram Afif, Almoez Ali, Mohammed Muntari, Khalid Muneer, Ahmed Alaa

Here’s Ecuador’s squad

Manager: Gustavo Alfaro

Goalkeepers: Alexander Domínguez, Hernán Galíndez, Moisés Ramírez

Defenders: Pervis Estupi?án, ángelo Preciado, Piero Hincapié, Xavier Arreaga, Diego Palacios, Jackson Porozo, Robert Arboleda, Félix Torres, William Pacho

Midfielders: Moisés Caicedo, José Cifuentes, Alan Franco, Jhegson Méndez, Carlos Gruezo, Gonzalo Plata, ángel Mena, Ayrton Preciado, Romario Ibarra, Jeremy Sarmiento

Forwards: Enner Valencia, Michael Estrada, Djorkaeff Reasco, Kevin Rodríguez

For all the teams playing in the World Cup, click here.

Organizers race to put last-minute touches on buildings and activities

An aerial view of Al Janoub stadium at sunrise on June 21 in Al Wakrah, Qatar.

Much of the infrastructure at this year’s World Cup has been built from scratch with organizers scrambling to get everything ready in time.?

While the stadiums and training facilities seem to have made the deadline, there have been some finishing touches still going on around Doha.?

People worked long into the night on Friday and Saturday to decorate streets with national flags as different fan activities were still being erected around the city.?

Each country has a small pop-up center that celebrates their culture and entertainment. Many were still being worked on ahead of the opening game.

Fan villages, which have been the intrigue of the world in the buildup, are still being perfected as they brace to host thousands of fans over the course of the tournament.?

Amid all the excitement, it’s easy to forget that thousands of migrant workers are the reason this country has been able to host this competition.?

“One of the things that is not really covered in the coverage of the World Cup and the coverage of this enormous construction boom is the expertise and heroism of the workers who built it,” Natasha Iskander, professor of urban planning and public service at New York University, told CNN.

“They built buildings that were unimaginable to everyone, including the engineers and designers, until they were built,” she said.

Everything certainly looks fantastic, from the pristinely clean streets to the jaw-dropping new buildings.?

20221116-world-cup-human-rights

Related article 'Our dreams never came true.' These men helped build Qatar's World Cup, now they are struggling to survive | CNN

While Qatar and FIFA say all are welcome to the World Cup, some LGBTQ fans explain why they are staying away

Activists gathered outside the Embassy of Qatar in London on the eve of the World Cup in protest against the nation's laws and stance on LGBTQ rights and general human rights violations, and FIFA's controversial decision to award the biggest soccer tournament in the world to Qatar.

As the first World Cup to be held in the Middle East, Qatar 2022 is undoubtedly a historic event, but it is also one clouded by controversy, particularly regarding LGBTQ rights.

Homosexuality in Qatar is illegal and punishable by up to?three years in prison. A report from Human Rights Watch published last month?documented cases as recently as September of Qatari security forces arbitrarily arresting LGBTQ people and subjecting them to “ill-treatment in detention.”

In September, German soccer fan Dario Minden, in a room full of dignitaries and sponsors at a human rights conference in Frankfurt hosted by the German Football Association, said: “I’m a man and I love men. I do – please don’t be shocked – have sex with other men. This is normal. So please get used to it, or stay out of football.”

Minden looked directly at Qatar’s ambassador to Germany, Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Saud al-Than, while he spoke.

Minden told CNN that he would not be going to Qatar and would not be watching the competition on television.

After the conference, Minden said he spoke privately with the ambassador, who he said told him all were welcome to Qatar. But Minden told CNN, “It’s not safe and it’s not right.”

What Qatar and FIFA say: A Qatar government official told CNN in a statement that the World Cup host is an inclusive country. “Everyone is welcome in Qatar,” the statement read, adding that “our track record has shown that we have warmly welcomed all people regardless of background.”

Measures were being implemented to ensure discrimination of any kind did not happen, such as human rights training sessions with public and private security forces, and the enacting of legal provisions for the protection of everyone, according to FIFA.

A statement sent to CNN on behalf of the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy, which, since its formation in 2011, has been responsible for overseeing the infrastructure projects and planning for the World Cup, said it was committed to “an inclusive and discriminatory-free” World Cup, pointing to the fact that the country had, it said, hosted hundreds of international and regional sporting events since being awarded the World Cup in 2010.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino also said that “everyone is welcome” on Saturday during a press conference.

“The LGBT situation I have been speaking about this topic with the highest leadership of the country several times, not just once. They have confirmed and I can confirm that everyone is welcome,” Infantino said.?

A “two-way street”: But for Englishman Rob Sanderson, the respecting of cultures is a “two-way street.”

Sanderson is special projects officer of?Pride in Football,?a network of UK LGBTQ fan groups and one of the supporter groups that joined forces in an?open letter?to condemn both FIFA and the Supreme Committee, refuting the world governing body and Qatar’s claims that it would be a World Cup for all.

“They said ‘everyone’s welcome’ but they’ve signed that line off by saying ‘you must respect our culture,’” he added.

“I don’t feel comfortable being used as an excuse for any hostility that would be around after the tournament. It doesn’t sit right with me,” he said.

CNN’s Teele Rebane in Hong Kong and CNN’s Sophie Jeong in Seoul contributed reporting to this post.

Fewer fans, but more noise: Supporters enjoy marketplace in downtown Doha

People are seen at the Souq Waqif marketplace in Doha, Qatar, on November 19, ahead of the Qatar 2022 World Cup football tournament.

Soccer fans have questioned whether Qatar can provide the same sort of atmosphere that is usually witnessed at World Cups.?

It’s true, for a number of reasons, that there will be fewer fans than at previous tournaments — but those who are in Doha have certainly been making their voices heard.?

A lot of the reveling so far has been centered around Souq Waqif, a beautiful area in downtown Doha. The traditional marketplace is a stunning display of Qatari architecture, and it’s easy to get lost through its maze of narrow streets.?

Stalls selling spices, souvenirs and plenty of soccer shirts spill out onto the street, where the smells of food and — more potently — sweet shisha fill the air.?

It’s also where fans gather in the evenings to parade their country’s flags and share their culture with supporters from all around the world.?

Groups walk up and down chanting songs late into the night. The louder they are, the more followers they tend to pick up until foot traffic is all but stopped in the souk.?

Interactions between supporters have so far been respectful as strangers sing, hug and dance together into the night.?

There is plenty of security on hand throughout the city but there has been precious little for them to do so far.?

Players and fans ready to get sweaty in warm temperatures at the World Cup

Fans gather around a FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 sign on the Corniche on November 19, in Doha, Qatar.

The reason that the Qatar World Cup 2022 was moved to the winter months was because it was deemed unsafe for players and fans to enjoy the tournament in the summer, when temperatures regularly soar above 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius).?

But Qatar is having a rather warm winter.?

Temperatures have been hovering above 86 degrees Fahrenheit (30 degrees Celsius) in the days running up to Sunday’s kickoff, which is much hotter than some of the players are used to playing and training in.?

It’s been energy-sapping heat, as well. Walk too far, too quickly and you’ll quickly find yourself drenched in sweat and in need of a drink.?

Shade is king, and tournament staff dotted around Doha are very quick to suggest you get out of direct sunlight.?

The heat tends to die down a little — though not much — in the evenings, but the nights are still humid and sticky.?

These warm temperatures could be a factor for the games that are played during daylight hours, as there will be plenty of sunshine and no rain expected in the coming week.

However, temperatures are in the process of cooling down, which will come as much relief to many of the players and fans over the course of the tournament.?High temperatures are forecast to be in the low-to-mid 80s Fahrenheit for the remainder of this week.

Danish team banned from wearing training shirts with human rights messages

The men’s?Danish soccer team?has been forbidden from wearing training shirts showing?human rights?messaging at this month’s?World Cup?in Qatar.

The Danish Football Federation’s (DBU) CEO, Jakob Jensen, revealed the ban in an interview with Danish publication DR Sporten, released earlier this month.

The DBU planned for the jerseys to read “Human Rights for All” but Jensen?told DR Sporten

FIFA abides by the International Football Association Board’s Laws of the Game and declined to comment on the matter when CNN reached out. Law 4.4 of the IFAB handbook stipulates that “Equipment must not have any political, religious or personal slogans, statements or images.”

Since the World Cup was awarded to Qatar over a decade ago, the event has been dogged by controversy with the host country strongly criticized due to the human rights situation in the Gulf state and the treatment of migrant workers.

To read more, click here.

Iranian players can protest at World Cup within FIFA regulations, manager says

Carlos Queiroz (C) watches team Iran during a training session in Doha on November 17, ahead of the Qatar 2022 World Cup football tournament.

The manager of the?Iranian?men’s soccer team said his players are allowed to?protest?while they participate at the?World Cup?in Qatar, as long as those?protests?do not break FIFA rules.

Carlos Queiroz made the comments at a press conference in Doha, Qatar, on Tuesday.

According to Reuters, Queiroz said: “The players are free to protest as they would if they were from any other country as long as it conforms with the World Cup regulations and is in the spirit of the game.

According to Reuters, Queiroz was involved in a testy exchange with a reporter from British outlet Sky during the press conference who asked: “Are you OK representing a country like Iran at this World Cup that represses the rights of women?”

The Portuguese manager responded, “How much you pay me to answer that question?… Don’t put in my mouth words that I did not say.

“I think you should start to think about what happened with the immigrants in England also. Go think about that.”

Iran is scheduled to play its first match of the tournament on Monday against England.

To read more on the Iranian team, click here.

How the ‘world’s most famous football’ became a ‘gift from God’ for former referee Ali Bin Nasser
‘Our dreams never came true.’ These men helped build Qatar’s World Cup, now they are struggling to survive.
Opinion: Qatar’s Ambassador on why the Middle East deserves the opportunity to host soccer’s biggest event
Qatar 2022: ‘Sport should not be politicized,’ France’s Macron says ahead of World Cup
How the ‘world’s most famous football’ became a ‘gift from God’ for former referee Ali Bin Nasser
‘Our dreams never came true.’ These men helped build Qatar’s World Cup, now they are struggling to survive.
Opinion: Qatar’s Ambassador on why the Middle East deserves the opportunity to host soccer’s biggest event
Qatar 2022: ‘Sport should not be politicized,’ France’s Macron says ahead of World Cup