Trump says he disputed U.S. star player's suspension, calling it 'stain' on World Cup
Trump says he disputed U.S. star playerâs suspension, calling it âstainâ on World Cup
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- President Trump said he called FIFA President Gianni Infantino to review the red-card suspension of American striker Folarin Balogun.
- He said it would have been âterribleâ and âvery unfairâ if one of the U.S. teamâs star players was barred.
- âIâm good at this stuff,â Trump told reporters.
WASHINGTON â President Trump said Monday that he called the president of FIFA to dispute a red card that would have barred the American striker Folarin Balogun from playing in Mondayâs elimination game with Belgium, acknowledging an extraordinary intervention by a head of state in the sportâs disciplinary process.
âI asked for a review because I didnât think it was a foul,â Trump told reporters during an event in the Oval Office. âI am good at this stuff. I didnât think it was a foul. I thought it was two great athletes that crashed into each other and got entangled.â
FIFA subsequently rescinded Balogunâs suspension, the first time the governing body has reversed a red-card penalty during a World Cup in 64 years. Belgium has protested the decision, and a hearing is scheduled for Monday to determine whether Balogunâs reinstatement will stand.
Trump said it would be a âstainâ on the World Cup to let the penalty stand, and even called the referee who issued the card âsuspectâ with a questionable past, though he did not provide evidence to support the accusation.
While many in the United States joined the president in celebrating the reversal, others blasted its adverse impact on the integrity of the sport.
Folarin Balogun will be able to play for the U.S. in Mondayâs World Cup round of 16 game with Belgium after FIFA suspended the red card it handed down.
The Belgium team has protested the penalty reversal, with the countryâs soccer federation saying it was âastonishedâ by the ruling.
âWe are not defending the national team or federation. We are defending football,â Belgian coach Rudi Garcia said.
The episode has drawn attention to Trumpâs close relationship with Gianni Infantino, the president of FIFA. In December, Infantino presented Trump with the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize, an award the governing body created after Trump was passed over for the Nobel Peace Prize. That decision is now the subject of an ethics complaint, backed by members of the European Parliament, who argue it compromised FIFAâs political neutrality.
Trump appeared to downplay the significance of his call to Infantino.
âI canât tell him what to do, and I donât believe he made the decision,â Trump said. âI think it was a committee that made the decision, and they made the right decision, because number one, it wasnât a foul, and you want to see a game with your best players.â
But he said it would be âvery unfairâ and âterribleâ to not let Balogun play. He said it would be the equivalent of barring Argentinaâs Lionel Messi or Portugalâs Cristiano Ronaldo â both global superstars â because they âranâ or âbumpedâ into someone on the field.
âWe have to have our best players, and they have to have their best players. And if we win or we lose, itâs fair,â Trump said. âLetâs say we lost [Balogun] and we lose the game â it would be a terrible thing.â
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