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Red card for FIFA, Infantino

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It took longer than most people thought it would, but U.S. President Donald Trump finally brought his brand of chaos to the men’s World Cup soccer tournament — and immediately soiled the pitch.

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Opinion

It took longer than most people thought it would, but U.S. President Donald Trump finally brought his brand of chaos to the men’s World Cup soccer tournament — and immediately soiled the pitch.

Trump was infuriated by a questionable red card shown to top U.S. forward Folarin Balogun during the American team’s July 1 match with Bosnia and Herzegovina — disciplinary action which meant Balogun was ejected from the game and suspended for his country’s next match versus Belgium on Monday, July 6.

Spurred on by officials including Andrew Giuliani (yes, the son of Rudy), director of the White House task force on the World Cup, Trump called up his bosom buddy, FIFA president Gianni Infantino, that very evening to ask that something be done about the suspension. He called Infantino again on July 4.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                U.S. President Donald Trump holds up a red card in the Oval Office as FIFA president Gianni Infantino looks on.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

U.S. President Donald Trump holds up a red card in the Oval Office as FIFA president Gianni Infantino looks on.

Lo and behold, FIFA announced July 5 that its disciplinary panel had suspended the application of Balogun’s one-match ban for a year, making him eligible to play in the Belgium game (which the U.S. lost 4-1, by the way). Multiple news reports quickly revealed Trump’s calls to Infantino — reaction was equally swift.

In the eyes of the globe, the head of state of a host nation had used his power to influence the biggest sporting competition in the world.

Both men had to speak to the scandal Monday.

Trump, true to form, simply blustered his way through. At one point he said he thought the decision was made by a committee, at another he seemed proud of his interference: “I was the one who got them to do it.”

Infantino, meanwhile, went into face-saving, damage-control mode. The Swiss lawyer pointed to the disciplinary panel and said due process was served — Trump’s phone calls hadn’t influenced the decision.

To billions of fans of “the beautiful game”, Gianni’s words rang false.

Since he was elected FIFA president in 2016 — in the wake of a corruption scandal which took down his predecessor, Josep (Sepp) Blatter, and officials at soccer federations around the globe — the behaviour of Infantino and the governing body has been demonstrably and shamelessly ruthless.

FIFA and Infantino have used the men’s and women’s World Cup tournaments — specifically, the interest, prestige and feel-good value they bring — as bludgeons to get their way on ticket prices, commercial rights and more. When faced with political difficulty, they resort to craven flattery to continue to extract maximum financial gain and avoid unseemly controversy.

In 2018 in Russia, Infantino overlooked Russia’s 2014 seizure of Crimea from Ukraine and its demonstrably poor human-rights record. He even declared that tournament “the best World Cup ever.”

Before the 2022 event in Qatar, Infantino and FIFA sat silent as investigations revealed that hundreds, if not thousands, of temporary foreign workers had died while working in deplorable conditions to build stadiums in the tiny Gulf country.

In the run-up to this year’s competition, Infantino has been currying favour with the volatile Trump since the U.S. president was elected.

FIFA rents office space in Trump Tower in New York City (rent paid directly to the Trump Organization). Infantino has allowed Trump to display the World Cup and Club World Cup trophies in the Oval Office.

Most galling, he even created a special FIFA Peace Prize and presented it to Trump at the World Cup draw in December, just weeks after the U.S. president complained bitterly about not winning last year’s Nobel Prize for peace.

In 2018 and 2022, Vladimir Putin and the Qatari Emir observed proceedings quietly.

Donald Trump was never going to be capable of doing that.

It is FIFA and Gianni Infantino who must now wear the president’s stain.

And it is Infantino who should be given a red card for bringing the game into disrepute.

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