Soccer Fans Fear Being Targets of U.S. Immigration Raids

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The Trump administration’s policies may have contributed to lower ticket sales for a Club World Cup tournament starting next week.

A man wearing a white soccer jersey with the number 9 on it holds up a phone to take a selfie with a crowd of people in a stadium.
Mehdi Taremi, an Iranian soccer player, posing with fans after Iran defeated Qatar in a World Cup qualifier on Thursday. Iran, the first team from Asia to qualify for the World Cup, is on a list of 12 countries that President Trump banned from travel to the United States.Credit...Karim Jaafar/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Tariq Panja

June 8, 2025Updated 4:12 p.m. ET

Manny Mizael swapped Brazil for Boston 27 years ago, but his passion for a soccer team based nearly 5,000 miles away in Rio de Janeiro burns as bright as ever.

So much so that Mizael helps run a supporters club based in Massachusetts for the team, Flamengo, one of Brazil’s most popular. His group regularly hosts match screenings that draw hundreds of fans.

But this year, fan WhatsApp groups began lighting up with chatter about the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown almost as much as about Flamengo’s latest successes. Fears were so high that the group scrapped a watch party in February, Mizael said, out of concerns that it could become a target for an immigration raid. Many of the fans are from outside the United States and lack legal status.

“People are being snatched off the streets and getting arrested,” Mizael said. “We decided not to do the game because we thought it could ruin the lives of many people.”

The cancellation was a preview of how President Trump’s immigration policies are shaping up to affect next year’s World Cup, the most-watched event in sports. It is expected to draw about 6.5 million people, mostly to the United States, where most matches will be played. (Canada and Mexico are co-hosting the tournament.) Fans routinely go all out for once-in-a-lifetime trips to the World Cup, drawing down years of savings or putting off major purchases like homes to pay for travel.

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Players on Flamengo, one of Brazil’s most popular soccer teams, celebrating a goal during a match in Rio de Janeiro last week.Credit...Wagner Meier/Getty Images

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