The Folarin Balogun red card saga has officially gone from soccer controversy to full-blown World Cup political drama.
According to reports, the White House made a direct call to FIFA asking president Gianni Infantino to review Balogun’s red card before the United States’ Round of 16 match against Belgium. FIFA later suspended Balogun’s automatic one-match ban under Article 27, making him eligible to play.
FIFA has insisted the White House did not influence the final decision, pointing to the independent disciplinary panel and its ability to suspend punishment under Article 27. But the timing is impossible to ignore. A red card that originally looked like it would keep America’s hottest striker out of the biggest USMNT match in years suddenly got reviewed, suspended and cleared before kickoff.
Balogun’s red card came in the United States’ 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina, when he was sent off after VAR reviewed a challenge where he stepped on an opponent’s ankle. The decision was widely criticized as harsh, and the USMNT was initially expected to be without its leading scorer against Belgium.
Then came the twist: Trump and the White House got involved.
Whether FIFA wants to admit influence or not, the optics are wild. Trump has built a close public relationship with Infantino throughout the build-up to the 2026 World Cup, and now the United States gets a major ruling in its favor at the perfect time. That does not prove corruption, but it absolutely gives critics fuel.
For the USMNT, though, none of that matters right now. Balogun is available. He has three goals in the tournament, has been the focal point of the American attack, and gives Mauricio Pochettino’s team a real chance to punch into the quarterfinals.
This is the kind of break host nations dream about. A controversial red card, political pressure, FIFA mystery, Trump involvement and a superstar striker cleared right before Belgium. The USMNT just got its biggest weapon back — and somehow, the story around it might be even bigger than the match itself.








