The Norway national football team won the opening match against Iraq in the World Cup with a convincing victory. The Norwegian team swept Iraq off the field in Foxborough. But after the match, it was another detail that caught attention. Fifa had used 64,146 pieces of blue tape to censor advertising at the stadium. It was to avoid free advertising for the shaving giant Gillette, which owns the naming rights to Norway's match arena. It was an action that was met with both admiration and criticism from supporters and commentators. Adam Crafton, a renowned football reporter, wrote that not all World Cup arenas had gone as far as the organizer in Boston. Norway will face Senegal in the second group stage match at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, where similar methods were not used to censor advertising. The match is scheduled to take place on Tuesday at 02.00. The Norwegian team is looking forward to the challenge, and the supporters are eager to see how the team will perform.