An Iranian student looks so much like his sporting idol Lionel Messi that it almost landed him in jail for disrupting public order.

So many people came out to take selfies with Reza Parastesh in the western city of Hamedan over the weekend that police rushed him into a station and impounded his car to stop the chaos and clear traffic.

The resemblance is so uncanny that some leading news outlets have reportedly used his photo when talking about the real Messi.

Reza Parastesh, left, is the spitting image of his sporting hero Lionel Messi, pictured right

Reza Parastesh, a doppelganger of Barcelona and Argentina's footballer Lionel Messi, walks down a street in Tehran on May 8

The student has perfected his Lionel Messi look, and with the attacker now sporting nis natural brown hair having ditched the blonde look, Reza looks even more like the Argentinian

Reza Parastesh's father started the whole furore by getting his son to pose up as Lionel Messi

The student was reluctant at first, but eventually grew into the role, wearing the Barcelona strip out in public, growing his hair and beard to match the footballer and carrying a ball

The furore began a few months ago when Reza's football-mad father pressured the 25-year-old into posing in a number 10 Barcelona jersey.

They sent the pictures off to a sports website, and got an immediate reply asking him to drop in to see them.

Reza is working on some tricks to become more like Barcelona's Lionel Messi

'I sent them one night and by the morning they had called me and said I should come in quickly for an interview,' he said.

Despite his early reluctance, Reza soon grew into his new role, cutting his hair like Messi and often donning the Barca jersey when he goes out.

It has paid off - he is fully booked with media interviews and has even landed modelling contracts.

'Now people really see me as the Iranian Messi and want me to mimic everything he does.

'When I show up somewhere, people are really shocked,' he said.

Iranians are obsessed with football, and Reza finds himself constantly besieged by fans looking for a selfie.

'I'm really happy that seeing me makes them happy and this happiness gives me a lot of energy,' he added.

The 25-year-old is constantly turning heads, pictured here posing for a photograph with two women

A woman poses for a selfie with the Lionel Messi lookalike on the streets of Tehran on May 8

The Messi doppelganger rubs a young boy's head with one hand and holds a football with the other (left) while the real deal celebrates another goal against Osasuna (right)

Iranians are obsessed with football, and Parastesh finds himself constantly besieged by fans looking for a selfie

The Messi tribute act (left) caused chaos this week when people mistook him for the man himself (right)

Reza Parastesh, a doppelganger of Barcelona and Argentina's footballer Lionel Messi, poses for a picture in a street in Tehran on May 8, 2017

To take his lookalike to the next level, the 25-year-old is working on some football tricks

The Messi lookalike loves football, but has never played professionally, so to up his game he is working on some tricks to make his act more believable.

The relationship has not always been a smooth one between the student and the global superstar.

During the last game between Iran and Argentina at the World Cup in 2014, Messi's 91st-minute goal robbed the Islamic republic of a place in the last 16.

Reza's dad was furious.

'After the game, my dad called me and said, "Don't come back home tonight - why did you score a goal against Iran?", the lookalike said.

'I said: "But that wasn't me!",' he said jokingly.

His goal now is to meet his hero in Barcelona, and maybe even land a job as his understudy.

'Being the best player in footballing history, he definitely has more work than he can handle.

'I could be his representative when he is too busy,' Reza said.