Washington — President Trump said Monday that he watched the World Cup incident that resulted in a one-game red card suspension for U.S. Men’s National Team forward Folarin Balogun, and that he later raised the matter with FIFA president Gianni Infantino to request a review.
Balogun was sent off during the U.S. team’s match against Bosnia and Herzegovina on Wednesday, a decision that would have ruled him out of the following game. The striker was penalized after stepping on the right ankle of Bosnia and Herzegovina defender Tarik Muharemović.
FIFA later overturned the one-match ban, though the decision has drawn criticism and is now the subject of an appeal. Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Mr. Trump said he “saw the play” and did not believe Balogun’s action amounted to a foul or an infraction. He said he discussed the incident directly with Infantino.
“I’m a person that loves sports and was a good athlete,” Trump said. “And I understand sports really well. Really well. And that wasn’t a foul. That wasn’t even an infraction. That was two guys running full speed that happened to crash into each other. You can’t take your foot and properly place it on somebody else’s foot when you’re going — no, these were two great athletes that got tangled up.”
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Trump also criticized the match official, calling the referee “a little bit suspect” and suggesting reporters look into his history. “I don’t want to say that because I don’t like to create controversy, but very suspect,” the president said. “If you like, I’ll provide you with the past. He made a call that nobody could believe. Even people on the other side, they said, ‘We got lucky.’”
The president insisted that Balogun “didn’t do anything wrong.” Still, despite saying he understands sports “really well,” Trump acknowledged that he initially did not realize what a red card meant in terms of future eligibility.
“Then I started hearing that that means you can’t play in the next game — at least in the next game,” he said, arguing that it was “very unfair” to punish a player for “a game that hasn’t been played yet.”
Asked whether he had urged FIFA to take another look, Trump confirmed: “Yes, I asked for a review by FIFA,” referring to his conversation with Infantino.
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“I spoke to a man who’s highly respected and by the way, whose level of respect has gone up tenfold,” he added, apparently referring to Infantino.
But Mr. Trump said he didn’t tell Gianni what to do, and he didn’t take credit for FIFA’s reversal.
“All I did, I asked for a review because I didn’t think it was a foul,” he continued. “… If they wouldn’t allow, you know, a top player, maybe the best, maybe among the best players on the team, I think it would have had a big stain. And I related, just that, I didn’t tell him what to do, I can’t tell him what to do.”
Infantino said Monday in a statement that “FIFA’s judicial bodies are independent.”
“Yes, I regularly discuss matters related to the FIFA World Cup with the president of the United States, and on this matter, I did receive a call from President Donald Trump, just as I receive calls from heads of state, government officials, football stakeholders and business executives from around the world on many different issues,” Infantino said.
“During our conversation, I explained that there was an ongoing legal process involving FIFA’s independent judicial bodies and that the case would be decided in due course by the competent bodies,” he said. “That is how FIFA’s system works, and it is a principle that I will always uphold.”
In a statement Monday, FIFA said that under Article 27 of its Disciplinary Code, “the FIFA Disciplinary Committee has the discretion to suspend the implementation of any disciplinary measures so long as they do not relate to match manipulation—which, of course, did not occur here.”
“It should be added that employment of art. 27 FDC is not unprecedented, as similar decisions have previously been issued during the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifiers,” FIFA said.
The organization maintained that sanctions against Balogun were not lifted, saying that the FIFA Disciplinary Committee imposed a $40,000 fine against the U.S. Soccer Federation. The committee’s move to suspend the one-match ban was “decided considering all of the specific circumstances surrounding the incident and evidence available,” FIFA said, but did not go into details.
“Reviewing the legal consequences of red cards in football is nothing new in the modern game,” the statement said. “Suspending the effects of a red card based on an explicit provision of the applicable regulations is a much more balanced measure.”
