For
24 days, the World Cup seemed to achieve a rare feat in America in 2026: It had
almost nothing to do with Donald Trump. But in an extraordinary twist following
an appeal from the President, star US goal-scorer Folarin Balogun
was permitted to play in the knockout clash with Belgium despite being sent off in the previous match
and earning a one-game ban.
Trump
added more rhetorical rocket fuel to the controversy, confirming that he’d called FIFA President Gianni
Infantino to ask him to review the suspension.
Balogun’s reprieve rocked global soccer, triggering fresh speculation about the
cozy relationship
between Trump and the FIFA supremo.
Source: https://www.wikiwand.com
Trump’s
call to Infantino and FIFA’s ultimate decision lifted a controversy about
soccer refereeing into an international incident surrounding the world’s most
popular sporting showcase. The subsequent drama raises concerns about political
interference and the integrity of the tournament. It doesn’t necessarily matter
whether Trump’s muscling into the issue was decisive. Just the impression that
it was risks souring global perceptions of an event that had generated
remarkably positive headlines.
Controversy
is guaranteed at World Cup finals. Who could forget Diego Maradona’s “hand of
God” goal for Argentina in 1986 or French star Zinedine Zidane’s 2006 World Cup
final headbutt? But there is no known precedent for a political leader
pressuring FIFA about who can play in a game, let alone one that is so
important to a host nation’s chances of advancing.
In
isolation, there are good reasons to think Balogun got a raw deal when he was
sent off during the national team’s win over Bosnia and Herzegovina. But
Trump’s decision to get involved introduces the possibility that Balogun’s
reprieve may not be on the grounds of fairness alone.
The
FIFA disciplinary committee invoked Article 27 of its code, which allows the
full or partial suspension of a disciplinary measure under a probationary
period. The red card remains in place, and if Balogun commits another offense,
the suspension will be restored, along with potential new penalties.
It
was not the first time FIFA used the clause. It previously stirred accusations
of favoritism toward a box-office player when it allowed Portugal’s Cristiano
Ronaldo to play in the preliminary rounds of these finals despite facing
suspensions for a red card in a qualifying game.
And
Trump’s political career shows he hardly sees rules as an impediment. It’s not
important how you win. It’s winning that counts. The two have had something of
a bromance, and the FIFA chief’s support often seemed a direct political
endorsement of a hugely controversial president.
Now
the precedent is set, who is to say whether other powerful world leaders might
think they can grab a political win by pressuring FIFA over an on-field
incident? And every controversial challenge for the rest of the World Cup is
now going to face huge scrutiny. If FIFA invoked its hazy powers to suspend the
Balogun ban, is it not now honor-bound to do so for any player of any other
nation?
But
Belgium won by 4-1 and that settles it. Does it? No! It is a bad precedent. Why
didn’t Trump ask FIFA to review the Belgium goals? It could be off-side? Maybe
a replay or better still award the match to the USA? And while we are at it PMX
should persuade Trump to ask FIFA to review the so-called “Malaysian” players
status, so that they could continue to play for Malaysia?
Reference:
Trump’s
red card call stirs political storm around World Cup, Stephen Collinson, CNN, 6
July 2026




