Soccer-US striker Balogun expected controversy over suspended red-card ban


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 16 - United States v Belgium - Seattle Stadium, Seattle, Washington, U.S. - July 6, 2026 Folarin Balogun of the U.S. looks dejected as he applauds fans after the match following their elimination from the World Cup IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Blake Dahlin

July 14 (Reuters) - U.S. striker Folarin Balogun ⁠said he knew FIFA's decision to suspend his one-game red-card ban at the World ⁠Cup would cause "a lot of controversy", after U.S. President Donald Trump called on FIFA ‌President Gianni Infantino to review the decision.

The 25-year-old was sent off during the team's 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina on July 1 after planting his boot into the ankle of defender Tarik Muharemovic, which carried an automatic one-match ​ban.

Days later FIFA made the controversial decision to suspend Balogun's ⁠ban for a one-year probationary period, with ⁠Trump claiming creditand world soccer's governing body citing Article 27 of its Disciplinary Code.

The unprecedented move ⁠cleared ‌the striker to play in a last-16 clash against Belgium and became one of the biggest talking points of the tournament.

"My initial reaction was I was happy to be ⁠back in the team. But when I kind of started to ​reflect, I knew it ‌was going to cause a lot of controversy," Balogun told CBS Mornings on Tuesday.

"I could ⁠almost see within ​my teammates a bit of nerves because it was something that's so unique.

"But the closer we got to the game, I tried to just focus as best as I could. But it was difficult, a lot ⁠of outside noise and that's hard to avoid."

The suspension ​thrust FIFA's disciplinary process into the global spotlight, drawing criticism from European soccer governing body UEFA and former referees.

Balogun conceded it was a confusing few days for him as he took on a supporting ⁠role in training to try to keep the team's morale high before finding out he was cleared to play.

"We found out on the team bus. Everybody was like screaming and shouting," Balogun said. "It was a pretty intense bus ride to the practice field."

Balogun said it was not hard to ​separate "the emotion from the job at hand" ahead of the match ⁠against Belgium, who expressed their anger about FIFA's decision and went on to win 4-1, knocking the ​U.S. out of the tournament.

"We're all professionals so it's not ‌something I think was too difficult to be able ​to separate once we kind of got over the initial announcement that I'd be back in the team," Balogun added.

(Reporting by Nicole Fernandes in TorontoEditing by Christian Radnedge)

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