Folarin Balogun shouldn't have been red carded, USMNT teammates claim
· Yahoo Sports
SANTA CLARA, CA — Weston McKennie saw replays of Folarin Balogun's red card and deemed the decision "questionable."
Tyler Adams agreed, saying that it was, in his opinion, only a yellow card.
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But Balogun was indeed shown a red card in the U.S. men's national team's World Cup round of 32 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina on Wednesday, July 1.
It was an eventful evening for Balogun, who scored the opener just before halftime, then saw his night end early in the 64th minute when he stepped on Tarik Muharemović's ankle. The challenge, while inadvertent, saw the striker step on the Bosnian defender's ankle in painful fashion.
Ater a VAR review, Balogun was off. On the night, losing the striker barely phased the USMNT, which defended stoutly with 10 men. Malik Tillman scored an 82nd-minute free kick, and the U.S. comfortably saw out a 2-0 win.
But moving forward, losing Balogun is a blow. He'll at least have to sit out the round of 16 game against Belgium, and could face further discipline from FIFA.
For McKennie, it wasn't just the decision to send Balogun off that was frustrating, but the lack of consistency from referees at the World Cup.
"I think it's questionable," McKennie said of the red card decision. "I think there's been many other plays like that throughout the tournament on other players that a card wasn't given at all, so it's disappointing.
"I don't think it's a red card, if anything maybe a yellow, but (it was) unintentional."
More angles of the red card shown to Balogun and the US 🟥 pic.twitter.com/Rh4zjoJTHI
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McKennie didn't mention him by name, but he was likely thinking of Argentina star Lionel Messi, who wasn't punished at all for a similar challenge on an Algeria player in their World Cup opener.
When asked his opinion on the call, Adams gave a very Adams answer.
"You're asking the wrong person with how I tackle, do you know what I mean?" Adams said with a laugh before continuing on cautiously.
"I think it's a yellow card. I think when you slow everything down, it is always going to look worse. I don't want to say too much."
When it comes to having Balogun for the Belgium game, there isn't much the USMNT can do other than complain.
Per World Cup regulations, teams can only appeal a red card if FIFA decides to add a suspension beyond one game. According to McKennie, that rule is another injustice for his teammate.
"I think in this stage of the tournament where every player is important, I think it's a bit bogus," McKennie said.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Folarin Balogun shouldn't have been red carded, USMNT teammates claim