Uefa
accuses Fifa of ‘crossing a red line’ over lifting of Folarin Balogun’s red
card ban
Decision
is ‘incomprehensible and unjustifiable’
Matt
Hughes
Mon 6 Jul
2026 10.47 BST
Fifa’s
willingness to bow to the wishes of Donald Trump by lifting the suspension of
the USA striker Folarin Balogun for the host side’s World Cup last-16 game
against Belgium was criticised strongly on Monday, with European politicians,
football associations and the governing body Uefa condemning the decision.
In an
unprecedented intervention in the middle of a tournament, Uefa accused Fifa of
crossing “a red line” by making an “incomprehensible and unjustifiable”
decision to rescind Balogun’s automatic one-match ban, which it claimed
undermined “the integrity of the game and the credibility of the competition”.
As
reported by the Guardian on Sunday, Trump repeatedly lobbied for Balogun’s
suspension to be lifted, with sources disclosing that the US president made
three calls to Fifa urging an intervention after the 25-year-old was sent off
in the USA’s last-32 win against Bosnia and Herzegovina last Wednesday.
The New
York Times has reported that lawyers who have worked previously for Trump were
engaged by US Soccer to challenge Fifa’s disciplinary regulations, with their
correspondence said to invoke the rights of the US as a nation and threaten a
further appeal to the court of arbitration for sport.
Trump
confirmed on Monday his involvement, telling a press conference at the Oval
Office that “I asked for a review from Fifa” as “it wasn’t a foul”, adding:
“All I did was ask for a review, I didn’t say you have to do this. That wasn’t
even an infraction. That was two guys running full speed that happened to crash
into each other.
“We’re
going to have a full team, and Belgium is going to have a full team, and you
know what? If they beat us, then they can be really proud. The other way, if
they beat us … I say it was rigged, just like the election was rigged in 2020.”
Fifa had
said previously that US Soccer had no right of appeal, but the world governing
body announced on Sunday that Balogun’s ban had been lifted for a 12-month
probationary period, another unprecedented decision during a tournament which
was explained by a brief reference to article 27 of Fifa’s disciplinary code,
which gives its judicial committee the authority to “fully or partially suspend
the implementation of a disciplinary measure”.
In a move
that will reignite a long-simmering conflict with Fifa, Uefa claimed that the
world governing body had ignored its own rulebook for political reasons.
“Football, like any other sports, relies on rules, which are the basis for
fair, honest and transparent competition,” read a statement. “Sometimes rules
are open to interpretation. In this case not.
“A
minimum automatic suspension of one match following a red card is not a
discretionary option and does not require the decision of a competent body to
be enacted. It is a principle embedded in regulations, which cannot be made
subject to exceptions, let alone in the middle of a tournament where several
other players have been in the same situation and regularly served their
suspension.
“When the
certainty of rules is no longer guaranteed by its guardians, the integrity of
the game is at stake and the credibility of a competition is undermined. We
express our disbelief at such an unprecedented, incomprehensible and
unjustifiable decision.”
The Royal
Belgian Football Association expressed its own “astonishment” at the decision,
with the national team manager, Rudi Garcia, comparing it to an April Fools’
Day joke. The RBFA has also received strong support from some of its European
counterparts. The German Football Association questioned whether the outcome
was the result of political interference, and said that Fifa’s credibility was
at stake. “The impression that there has been active political interference in
sport must be dispelled swiftly and conclusively,” read a statement. “The
integrity of the competition and the credibility of Fifa are at stake.”
The
Football Association declined to comment when contacted by the Guardian but the
England head coach, Thomas Tuchel, criticised the decision following his side’s
thrilling 3-2 win against Mexico that secured their place in the last 16, where
they will meet Norway in Miami on Saturday.
Tuchel
said: “Where does it end now? Do we appeal if a yellow card is not a yellow
card? Do we think it’s not a red card or who thinks so? Where does it start and
where does it end? I don’t have an answer. It’s just strange for me. We just
want to have consistency in the decisions.”
Trump’s
involvement first emerged after he publicly thanked Fifa for “reversing a great
injustice” on Sunday afternoon. The White House official X account then
responded to Trump’s post by writing: “USA-USA-USA” next to an image of a bald
eagle.
The close
relationship between Trump and Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, has been a
recurring theme of the World Cup and the buildup to the tournament, most
notably when the former was awarded the inaugural Fifa Peace Prize at the World
Cup draw in Washington DC last December. While Fifa has used that relationship
to secure from the US government some tax exemptions for competing teams, it
has not everything it wanted from the Trump administration and had some major
embarrassments, such as the host nation’s treatment of the Iran national team
and refusal to grant a visa to the Somali referee, Omar Artan, on national
security grounds.
Infantino’s
predecessor, Sepp Blatter, who resigned in disgrace following FBI raids on
Fifa’s headquarters in 2015 and was subsequently banned from football, was
another to criticise Trump’s role in the process. “Red cards are not overturned
by political phone calls,” Blatter wrote on X. “They are overturned by rules,
evidence and independent bodies. 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?”
Several
European politicians took a similar stance, with the Belgian foreign minister
Maxime Prévot accusing Fifa of violating the rules of football. “As a former
football referee, I have always been committed to upholding the rules and
ensuring decisions are fair,” Prévot told Politico. “This decision clearly
raises many questions. If a phone call is really the reason for this
incomprehensible decision, it would be a blatant violation of the most basic
rules of football and sport.”
Glen
Micallef, European commissioner for intergenerational fairness, youth, culture
and sport, also voiced his opposition. “Decisions on sporting rules and
sporting matters belong to sporting bodies, not politicians,” he said.
“Influencing sporting decisions would undermine the autonomy of sport.”
The RBFA
has launched an appeal but that is unlikely to be the end of the matter, as the
organisation has made clear it is exploring further legal action against Fifa,
including going to Cas.

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