Soccer-Extra amnesty means World Cup final heartbreak less likely in 2026


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group A - Mexico v South Africa - Estadio Azteca, Mexico City, Mexico - June 11, 2026 South Africa's Sphephelo Sithole is shown a red card by referee Wilton Sampaio REUTERS/Hannah Mckay

ATLANTA, June 12 (Reuters) - There might ⁠have been three red cards in Thursday's opening game, but the possibility of players missing the World ⁠Cup final through suspension has been greatly reduced after FIFA introduced an extra amnesty for the ‌2026 finals.

Brazilian referee Wilton Sampaio sent off three players as co-hosts Mexico beat South Africa 2-0 – one fewer than the total dismissed throughout the 2022 finals in Qatar.

Red cards lead to automatic one-match sanctions, which can be increased in the case of violent conduct by FIFA’s disciplinary ​committee. But the more common suspensions during the tournament will almost certainly ⁠come from the accumulation of yellow cards, and ⁠it is here where world football’s governing body has sought to provide wiggle room.

At major tournaments, players cautioned twice ⁠in ‌separate matches then serve a one-match suspension - a source of heartache for some in the past when cards were carried right through tournaments.

Germany’s Michael Ballack missed the 2002 final after picking up his second booking ⁠of the tournament for a tactical foul in the semi-final win against ​South Korea. Missing their midfield general ‌for the sport’s ultimate match, the Germans lost 2-0 to Brazil.

EXTRA AMNESTY FOR YELLOW CARDS

In 1990 it ⁠was the same ​for Claudio Caniggia. After netting Argentina's equaliser in the semi-final against hosts Italy, he was booked late on for a deliberate handball which, added to the yellow he had collected earlier in the tournament, ruled him out of the final where Argentina lost to ⁠Germany.

From the 2010 World Cup, yellow cards were expunged after the ​quarter-finals, effectively ending any chance of a player being suspended for the final through an accumulation of yellow cards.

For the expanded 2026 tournament, FIFA has gone a step further and introduced an extra amnesty for yellow cards, effectively wiping the ⁠slate clean twice.

The disciplinary records of players who have one yellow card after the three-game group stage will now be expunged so that they start the knockout phase with a clear record.

The same will happen again after the quarter-finals, which is effectively the third knockout round of the 48-team tournament.

FIFA already showed leniency during the qualifying stages when Cristiano ​Ronaldo should have received a three-match ban under their disciplinary code for violent ⁠conduct after elbowing Ireland’s Dara O'Shea during Portugal's penultimate qualifier in Dublin in November.

Instead, FIFA’s disciplinary committee said that as ​the player had not received a red card in his other 225 ‌international appearances he would serve only a one-match ban – thereby ​ensuring he would be available for Portugal for their opening World Cup Group K clash against the Democratic Republic of Congo in Houston on Tuesday.

(Writing by Mark Gleeson in Atlanta; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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