FIFA, football's world governing body, suspended Folarin Balogun's red-card ban on Monday, clearing the United States forward to face Belgium in the round of 16, after President Donald Trump reportedly telephoned FIFA president Gianni Infantino to lobby for the reversal 1. Reuters, the Associated Press and The New York Times all reported the call; neither FIFA nor The White House has confirmed it, and FIFA has issued no statement of its own.
Balogun had been dismissed in the 64th minute of the USA's win over Bosnia and Herzegovina on 1 July, a suspension that would have kept him out against Belgium. The reversal itself is confirmed; the cause is not. What FIFA's Appeal Committee has done is documented, while the reported phone call that preceded it rests on multi-outlet reporting alone.
Nine days earlier the same committee upheld Themba Zwane's three-match ban and published no reasoning, ruling South Africa's captain out of his nation's first World Cup knockout . The committee discloses its reasoning at its own discretion, so a silent ruling against South Africa beside a swift reprieve for a host nation reads as a procedural contrast, not an evidentiary one. Belgium's federation called the reversal "astonishing", Mauricio Pochettino said "we celebrate the decision", and England's Thomas Tuchel joked that Trump might spring Quansah too 2.
