Football experts, officials warn of ‘dangerous precedent’ set by
FIFA after U-turn on red card for USA forward Balogun.One Phone Call, One Vanishing Red Card — The Balogun ScandalPublished On 7 Jul 2026The firestorm surrounding the
World Cup following
FIFA’s controversial U-turn on a red card given to USA forward
Folarin Balogun may be unprecedented and bizarre, but experts believe it is not unexpected, given US President
Donald Trump’s history of intervening in non-political matters.
FIFA dismissed
Belgium’s appeal against the reversal of Balogun’s suspension on Monday, terming it “inadmissible”, hours before kickoff in the USA vs
Belgium knockout match in Seattle.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4Bellingham inspires 10-man England to beat Mexico 3-2 in last-16 thrillerlist 2 of 4‘Remembered forever’: How Haaland carried Norway into
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World Cup must pay its carbon billend of listBalogun received a red card for stepping awkwardly on
Bosnia and Herzegovina’s
Tarik Muharemovic’s ankle in a 2-0 win for the USA in their round-of-32 match, triggering an automatic one-game suspension. It would have led to Balogun’s omission from the USA’s squad for their last-16 match against
Belgium, until
FIFA announced on Sunday that it had suspended the red card. The decision came after Trump had urged
FIFA chief
Gianni Infantino to review the case.While Trump’s bond with Infantino is no secret, a leading sport industry expert says the controversy emphasises the expansion of Trump’s influence on the global governing body of football.“Trump’s MAGA [
Make America Great Again] agenda is now on full show for the world to see, as is Infantino and
FIFA’s pursuit of revenues,”
Simon Chadwick, professor of Afro-Eurasian sport at the Emlyon Business School in Shanghai, told
Al Jazeera.“There has long been an accident waiting to happen.”While Trump was vocal about issues linked to the
World Cup in the run-up to the tournament, including the Iranian team’s participation, he did not comment on football-related incidents once the
World Cup got under way until Balogun’s red card.Chadwick explained that as events developed, “it seemed inevitable that Trump would break his three-week-long silence, and that Infantino would capitulate to his request”.Infantino’s damage control on Monday only reinforced Chadwick’s analysis of the situation.The
FIFA president insisted in a statement that the world football governing body’s judicial committees are independent and made the call to reverse the suspension.“They operate autonomously, apply the
FIFA Disciplinary Code, and decide cases based on the applicable regulations and the specific facts before them,” he said, before admitting to his conversation with Trump.“Yes, I regularly discuss matters related to the
FIFA World Cup with the president of the
United States, and on this matter, I did receive a call from President
Donald Trump, just as I receive calls from heads of state, government officials, football stakeholders, and business executives from around the world on many different issues,” he said in the statement.“During our conversation, I explained that there was an ongoing legal process involving
FIFA’s independent judicial bodies and that the case would be decided in due course by the competent bodies. That is how
FIFA’s system works, and it is a principle that I will always uphold,” Infantino added.The
FIFA president said he always reads the decisions handed down, and “sometimes I am surprised by them. Sometimes I agree with them, and sometimes I disagree”.“What I always do, however, is respect those decisions and the autonomy of the bodies that make them.”Chadwick, however, argued that
FIFA’s third-party interference rules flew out the window after Trump intervened.“What has happened in the Balogun case appears highly irregular and a breach of established ethical standards,” he said.“Apparently changing rules mid-tournament, without consultation, under the influence of an often-chaotic politician, sets a very dangerous precedent,” he added.The decision has caused outrage against
FIFA, support for
Belgium, and an inevitable stream of jokes from national team head coaches wondering whether they, too, can appeal the red and yellow cards given to their players.After England defender Jarell Quansah got sent off in his side’s 3-2 last-16 win over Mexico, England coach Thomas Tuchel questioned the decision.“Who overturns this decision then, and when? And on what grounds? How far does this go now? This is strange for me,” Tuchel told reporters at Mexico City Stadium on Sunday.Even former
FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who stepped down in 2015 amid corruption allegations, joined the criticism.“Red cards are not overturned by political phone calls. They are overturned by rules, evidence, and independent bodies,” he wrote in a post on X.“If a US president intervenes with the
FIFA president – and a player is suddenly cleared before a
World Cup knockout match – the question is unavoidable: Quo vadis [where are you going],
FIFA? Football must never become a playground for political power.”Chadwick echoed the sentiment.“It raises all manner of questions: What next? By whom? For what purposes? Benefitting whom? It appears that
FIFA has overstepped its remit and is permitting itself to be commercialised, geo-politicised, and Americanised.”