TGL 29 | The Most political World Cup Ever - Dr. Kristian Ulrichsen

Iran's national team can't spend the night in the United States. A referee arrived with a valid visa and was turned back at the border. FIFA promised free movement for all teams. Trump didn't care. Welcome to the 2026 World Cup, the most geopolitically charged sporting event in modern history. Maryanne Maldonado sits down with Dr. Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, Fellow at Rice University's Baker Institute Middle East Institute and one of the leading voices on the intersection of sports, politics, and global affairs, to break down what's really happening beneath the surface of this tournament. From sportswashing and FIFA's Faustian bargain with Trump, to what Houston's diversity means in a World Cup era of ICE fears and diaspora communities, to the jaw-dropping scenario of the US potentially playing Iran on July 3rd, this episode connects the beautiful game to the ugliest geopolitical tensions of our time. And when the final whistle blows? The legacy might not be the politics. It might be a generation of American kids who fell in love with soccer. Subscribe for global affairs content that connects the world to your world. Topics covered: • Iran's team commuting from Tijuana — is this a FIFA breach? • How Trump outmaneuvered FIFA's free movement guarantee • What sportswashing actually means — and why this World Cup inverts it • Gianni Infantino's strategy with Trump — and why it failed • Houston as a host city: diversity, ICE concerns & diaspora communities • The 2028 LA Olympics — what the IOC is watching right now • Could the US play Iran on July 3rd? What that would mean • America 250 celebrations in the middle of the tournament • The lasting legacy: politics or grassroots soccer growth?