FIFA, football's world governing body, rejected South Africa's appeal on 26 June and upheld the three-match ban on captain Themba Zwane, publishing no reasoning for the decision . South Africa had built its case on Lionel Messi's unpunished stamp on an Algeria player, arguing the two incidents exposed an inconsistent disciplinary standard . The Appeal Committee dismissed that argument without explaining what separates the two.
Zwane is Bafana Bafana's captain and chief creator, and the ban rules him out of South Africa's first World Cup knockout match in the nation's history, against Canada on 28 June in Los Angeles . South Africa had reached the round of 32 after three previous group-stage exits. The original Disciplinary Committee treated a raised arm on Mexico's Roberto Alvarado as serious foul play, a red-card category for reckless or violent contact, and added two matches to the automatic one-game suspension.
The Appeal Committee left that upgrade intact and issued no written reasons, which matters because FIFA's judicial bodies publish reasoned decisions on a roughly four-month archive cycle, last updated on 1 June 1. The only on-record account of why Zwane was banned and Messi was not will come from SAFA, the South African Football Association and the aggrieved party, not from the committee that decided both. SAFA said it was "disappointed with the outcome of our appeal because we strongly believe that the punishment is far harsher than the offence" 2.
Without published reasoning, no federation can know what turns a one-match suspension into three, or contest a sanction against a consistent benchmark. Two incidents in one tournament now carry two outcomes, and the body that produced both has put nothing on the record to reconcile them.
