Trump
Asked FIFA to Review U.S. Player’s Suspension. Now He’s Eligible to Play.
The
reversal of Folarin Balogun’s World Cup suspension is highly unusual. It was
the first time since 1962 that FIFA has nullified a suspension for a red card
received during the World Cup.
By Tyler
Pager and Tariq Panja
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent and reported from Istanbul. Tariq Panja is
a global sports correspondent and reported from Mexico City.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/05/us/trump-fifa-balogun-world-cup.html
July 5,
2026
President
Trump called Gianni Infantino, the president of FIFA, in the hours after the
United States men’s soccer team played Wednesday and asked him to review the
suspension of the team’s top goal scorer in the World Cup, Folarin Balogun,
after he was given a red card, according to four people familiar with the
conversation.
On
Sunday, FIFA reversed the suspension, announcing that Mr. Balogun would be
eligible to play Monday against Belgium.
The
reversal is highly unusual and is the first time since 1962 that FIFA has
allowed a player to appear in a game when they would have been suspended after
being sent off in the World Cup. Mr. Infantino has spent years trying to curry
favor with Mr. Trump. Last year, FIFA created and gave Mr. Trump the FIFA Peace
Prize amid the president’s public, but failed, campaign to win the Nobel Peace
Prize.
Shortly
after Mr. Balogun’s red card, senior Trump administration officials, including
Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary, and Andrew Giuliani, the executive
director of the White House task force on the World Cup, engaged lawyers to
help the U.S. Soccer Federation try to appeal, despite FIFA’s rules against
such appeals, according to two of the people familiar with the call.
U.S.
Soccer officials argued the red card was improperly given to Mr. Balogun
because the officials should not have used slow-motion video replay in
determining the penalty, the people said. Use of video replays is common
practice, and players have frequently been ejected after reviews.
Scott
Goodwin, a hedge fund manager and major donor to U.S. Soccer, brought to the
attention of Trump officials public accusations that Raphael Claus, the
referee, was involved in match fixing in Brazil by giving out irregular red
cards. Brazilian authorities and FIFA have found no evidence of wrongdoing by
Mr. Claus, but Mr. Trump brought up those allegations in his call with Mr.
Infantino, the people familiar with the call said. Mr. Goodwin referred comment
to U.S. Soccer. Mr. Claus did not initially call a foul on Mr. Balogun but was
asked to review his decision by other officials tasked with monitoring replays.
That group hailed from Venezuela, Colombia and France.
On
Sunday, Mr. Infantino and Mr. Trump spoke again right after Mr. Balogun was
reinstated, and the president told Mr. Infantino that it was the right
decision, the people said. Mr. Trump also called Mauricio Pochettino, the U.S.
coach, and wished him luck in the game against Belgium on Monday. Mr.
Pochettino told reporters at a news conference on Sunday that his team was “not
the bad guys.”
FIFA did
not immediately respond to a request for comment but confirmed Mr. Balogun’s
eligibility after The Athletic reported the planned reversal earlier in the
afternoon.
The
Belgian federation reacted with fury on Sunday. In a statement it described
being “astonished by FIFA’s decision to declare suspended United States player
Folarin Balogun eligible to play in the U.S.A.-Belgium match.”
The White
House referred to Mr. Trump’s post on social media in which he celebrated
FIFA’s announcement, though he did not say that he called Mr. Infantino, nor
did he take any credit for the decision.
“Thank
you to FIFA for doing what was right and reversing a great injustice,” the
president wrote on Truth Social.
Mr.
Balogun was ejected midway through the second half against Bosnia and
Herzegovina on Wednesday after tussling with an opponent and after opening the
scoring in Santa Clara, Calif., to set the United States on course for victory.
As the men went for a ball, Mr. Balogun’s foot came down on his opponent’s
ankle, causing it to twist awkwardly. After a video review, he was sent off the
field with a red card.
The red
card also carried a one-game suspension for Monday’s match against Belgium.
But on
Sunday, FIFA said Mr. Balogun could play.
“In line
with Article 27 of the FIFA disciplinary code, the implementation of the match
suspension is suspended for a probationary period of one year,” the governing
body said in a statement. “If Folarin Balogun commits another infringement of a
similar nature and gravity during the probationary period, the suspension shall
be revoked and the sanction enforced without prejudice to any additional
sanction imposed for the new infringement.” The statement did not explain why
he did not receive an automatic ban as other players who have been sent off
have received.
A memo
created for U.S. Soccer by lawyers who have worked for Mr. Trump, reviewed by
The New York Times, outlined how the federation could find possible gaps in
rules around red cards to strengthen its case. Effectively, the three-page
document suggested FIFA’s regulations on disciplinary action were sufficiently
vague to create grounds for an appeal. It even suggested the appeal invoke the
rights of the United States as a nation and threaten to appeal to the Court of
Arbitration for Sports, the sporting world’s top arbitration body.
In its
statement, Belgium’s federation said FIFA had acted in direct contravention of
its own regulations as well as against what it had briefed to competing teams
at a meeting before the World Cup and in a letter sent to federations in May.
The
sudden clemency for Mr. Balogun will lead to more questions about the type of
relationship Mr. Infantino has developed with Mr. Trump.
The
president of Norway’s federation had already joined an ethics complaint against
Mr. Infantino that alleges that he breached FIFA’s statutes on political
neutrality after awarding Mr. Trump the peace prize. Mr. Infantino has
described himself as a friend of the American president and has frequently
lavished him with praise and gifts in a way that is unique in FIFA’s 122-year
history.
In
contrast with its handling of this case, FIFA had received criticism over the
treatment of Iran during the tournament. Iranian players were required to stay
in Mexico and were limited in the amount of time they could spend in the United
States amid continuing tensions between the two countries.
Allowing
Mr. Balogun to play benefits the United States, with the striker being the main
goal threat as the United States tries to advance to quarterfinals for the
first time in 24 years. Privately, some senior soccer officials expressed their
incredulity at the handling of the case and openly discussed whether a
precedent had now been set so other teams could demand their players be
reinstated should they receive similar suspensions.
It is not
the first time FIFA has drawn scrutiny for altering rules that appear to favor
certain teams or star players. Cristiano Ronaldo, one of the world’s most
famous players, was cleared to play at the start of this year’s World Cup when
under regular rules he should have missed the first two games because of a red
card before the tournament began.
Mr.
Balogun’s reprieve resembles a case in 1962 when Brazil’s star attacker
Garrincha was allowed to play in that year’s final only after the intervention
of the Brazilian government. He had been sent off in a semifinal, and officials
including the prime minister, Tancredo Neves, who would later become president,
petitioned FIFA to allow him to play.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.
Tariq
Panja is a global sports correspondent, focusing on stories where money,
geopolitics and crime intersect with the sports world.


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