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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

July 6, 2026

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FIFA’s decision to overturn Folarin Balogun’s red card sparked an uproar among soccer officials, coaches, and government authorities. UEFA said FIFA crossed “a red line.” The Royal Belgian Football Association unsuccessfully appealed the reversal ahead of the U.S.-Belgium match Monday night. And President Donald Trump called the red card “very unfair.”

—Margaret Fleming

First Up

  • MLB’s All-Star weekend is kicking off Saturday and will feature a series of shifts in its scheduling, competition formats, and presentation. Read the story.
  • Despite previously simulcasting portions of UFC shows, CBS won’t air a portion of this weekend’s highly anticipated UFC 329 event. Read the story.
  • Versant, the parent company of Golf Channel, is buying the golf simulator company Full Swing for an eye-popping $530 million. Read the story.
  • Active LIV Golf members will compete at the Scottish Open—a non-major championship PGA Tour–sanctioned event—for the first time this week. Read the story.

Everything You Need to Know About the Trump-FIFA-Balogun Mess

REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo

SEATTLE — After initially confirming Folarin Balogun would be out for the U.S. men’s national team’s round-of-16 match in Seattle on Monday against Belgium, FIFA abruptly reversed course Sunday, announcing a suspension of the striker’s one-match ban.

FIFA hasn’t given any sort of detailed explanation about why it reconsidered or overturned the red card given in Wednesday’s round-of-32 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the move is nearly without recent precedent. One of its own vice presidents reportedly called it an “utter disgrace.”

The U.S. staged a full lobbying campaign.

President Donald Trump called FIFA three times about it, including bringing up the referee’s past allegations of match fixing, according to The New York Times. The government assembled lawyers to help U.S. Soccer make its case about the misuse of slow-motion replay to hand out the red card. The federation also threatened to take the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, according to the New York Post.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has a close relationship with Trump, having rented FIFA office space at Trump Tower in New York, accompanied him on official trips, advocated for him to win the Nobel Peace Prize, and created the FIFA Peace Prize for him.

Belgium is upset, and FIFA on Monday dismissed the federation’s challenge against Balogun’s eligibility. The striker who has scored three goals for the U.S. this tournament can play Monday night in Seattle.

The U.S. Stance

On Wednesday night, Balogun stepped on opponent Tarik Muharemović’s ankle while falling. The referee did not call a foul at all on the field, but then the VAR team showed them Balogun’s fall in slow motion. VAR rules say that slow motion should not be used to determine the intensity of a play, and those decisions should be made using footage shown at normal speed. But the effect on Muharemović’s ankle looked severe in still images and slow motion, and Balogun was given a red card.

Trump told reporters Monday that he called FIFA and asked for a review of the one-game ban. He told reporters Balogun’s collision “wasn’t a foul, that wasn’t even an infraction.” He said he “didn’t know” what a red card meant, openly asking, “How do you penalize them for a game that hasn’t been played yet?” The president confirmed that he brought up the slow-motion VAR decisions and referee’s history.

“All I did was ask for a review,” Trump said. “I didn’t say, ‘You have to do this.’”

REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo

U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino said FIFA’s suspension is “very good for football” because now teams can try to reverse an unfair decision that happens on the pitch. He also said, “If anyone was harmed in this whole situation, it was the United States,” because the team had to play with 10 men for most of the second half.

A U.S. government official familiar with the situation tells Front Office Sports they believe FIFA is “standing up for fair play” and “correcting an injustice” with its suspension, because they say the original procedure for awarding Balogun the red card was flawed. They also say they “haven’t really paid attention” to the largely European backlash, and suggested those organizations could be acting in their own best interests.

Europeans Furious

Belgian players, coaches, and administrators have been outraged by the last-second reversal, and the country’s Royal Belgian Football Association says FIFA has provided no details justifying the move.

Belgium, which argued the decision violates FIFA’s competition regulations that call for an automatic suspension from the next match after a red card, said it asked for more details. But FIFA turned that inquiry into a formal appeal process—one that would be inadmissible under FIFA’s own rules because Belgium hadn’t received a “reasoned decision” for the suspension yet, the federation said. Still, Belgium challenged Balogun’s eligibility for the match, which FIFA dismissed as “inadmissible” on Monday, saying the federation “is not a party to the proceedings and, as such, has no standing to appeal the decision.”

Many major soccer figures in Europe have come out against the decision.

UEFA released an incendiary statement, saying FIFA’s “unprecedented, incomprehensible and unjustifiable decision” to suspend Balogun’s one-match ban “crossed a red line.” Norway coach Ståle Solbakken called it “a bad, bad, bad, bad, bad decision that will hurt the World Cup,” and said he feels sorry for the U.S. team because “if they win, it will always be that will hang in the balance of it.”

Even former FIFA president Sepp Blatter—whose leadership saw major criminal investigations and corruption convictions—wrote on social media: “Football must never become a playground for political power.”

FIFA’s Muddy Explanation

In its statement announcing the news, FIFA’s disciplinary committee did not say in its decision why it was suspending Balogun having to sit out a match “for a probationary period” of a year, other than by citing Article 27 of its disciplinary code that it claims allows it to do so.

“The judicial body may decide to fully or partially suspend the implementation of a disciplinary measure,” reads the first subpoint of Article 27, the same justification that FIFA cited in November when imposing a similar controversial stay for Cristiano Ronaldo. The Portugal captain got a red card in World Cup qualifying that would’ve kept him out of two group-stage matches.

The global governing body did not answer questions from FOS about what prompted the review in Balogun’s case.

“That appearance of bias is destabilizing to the integrity of FIFA and the tournament,” UCLA law professor Steven Bank tells FOS. “By not providing a rationale, some explanation of why this particular red card was handled this way, and the context you provide about Infantino’s actions toward Trump in the past several years, it all creates this picture that is problematic.”

Infantino reiterated in a statement on Monday that FIFA’s disciplinary committee is an independent body, and he talked to Trump and explained the legal process.

“I read the decisions of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee when they are issued. Sometimes I am surprised by them. Sometimes I agree with them, and sometimes I disagree,” Infantino said.

“What I always do, however, is respect those decisions and the autonomy of the bodies that make them. Whether we personally like a decision or not is irrelevant. Respect for independent institutions and the rule of law is what protects the integrity of our competitions and the credibility of FIFA at all times.”

Later Monday afternoon, FIFA released an unsigned “Statement from the Chairperson of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee,” who was unnamed but is Mohammad Al Kamali of the United Arab Emirates.

The 13-point statement explained little about FIFA’s process and reasoning, but it did add that Balogun was being fined $40,000 in part because he entered the field for a victory celebration despite his ejection.

The statement alluded to how FIFA let Ronaldo play, saying that such a move “is not unprecedented, as similar decisions have previously been issued during the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifiers.”

It repeatedly emphasized that the card itself was not overturned, only the suspension, and added that such disciplinary reviews were common in “the majority of top-tier leagues.”

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Kyle Ross

What Happens Next?

Much has been made about Article 27, and whether FIFA is cementing a dangerous precedent started by the Ronaldo decision by invoking it for a red card in the middle of the World Cup.

According to OutKick founder Clay Travis, the disciplinary committee “agreed the penalty was incorrectly given,” and therefore rescinded it under Article 27. But some have argued that Article 27 shouldn’t apply to a red card at all.

Either way, FIFA has opened a can of worms. The only other red card to be rescinded during a World Cup came in 1962, when Brazilian legend Garrincha was allowed to play in the final after being shown a red card in the semifinal, a decision that was widely believed to be impacted by political considerations and perhaps even bribery.

Other countries are seeing their own opportunities after Balogun’s mid-tournament turnaround.

France is now appealing its own yellow card given to Michael Olise in Saturday’s win over Paraguay. (Any player who gets a second yellow in a quarterfinal will be suspended for the semifinal, and a long list of stars beyond Olise have one yellow on their record as of Monday.) The French federation claims the move is not a direct reaction to Balogun’s suspension, The Athletic reported, but the timing is undeniable. A British lawmaker has asked FIFA to suspend the red-card punishment for English player Jarell Quansah, citing the Balogun decision.

Belgium said it still contests Balogun playing despite its denied appeal, and has the option to take its case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, though any decision at CAS would not come before Monday’s game.

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ONE BIG FIG

Roger That

John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

$3.1 billion

The amount that Canadian telecom giant Rogers Communications is paying Kilmer Sports to acquire the final 25% of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment that it didn’t already own. Rogers—the majority owner of the parent company of the NHL’s Maple Leafs and NBA’s Raptors—has long had the option to buy this last bit of equity, and it had previously signaled its intent to exercise it. The transaction, expected to close in the fourth quarter of this year, will further cement the status of Rogers as one of the world’s most powerful sports ownership entities. The company’s holdings also include MLB’s Blue Jays, Toronto FC of MLS, the Canadian sports media network Sportsnet, and Rogers Centre and Scotiabank Arena in Toronto.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Country Roads Cash In

Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

“It’s far more lucrative to have your song played at a stadium than it is if each person in that stadium were to go home, put their AirPods in, and stream your music one time.”

—Stephen Vanyo, an entertainment and sports attorney, about John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads” becoming an unofficial anthem for the U.S. men’s national team at the World Cup.

After the USMNT’s June 19 victory over Australia, “Country Roads” generated nearly 1.7 million official on-demand U.S. streams over the next three days, according to Billboard. That was a 20% increase from the song’s 1.4 million streams during the same three-day period one week earlier. Vanyo estimated that 1 million Spotify streams generate roughly $3,000 for the owner of a sound recording, though actual payouts vary by platform and agreement. Read the story.

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In the latest episode of FOS Explains, Derryl Barnes breaks down the business behind the tournament from media rights and sponsorships to ticket sales, tourism, and the sports betting boom that’s projected to drive nearly $600 billion in global wagers.

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STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 3 - Granollers to Les Angles - Les Angles, France - July 6, 2026 Team Visma | Lease a Bike's Jonas Vingegaard wearing the yellow jersey and UAE Team Emirates XRG's Tadej Pogacar in action with other cyclists during stage 3

REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

Tour de France ⬇ Organizers urged fans to stay away from the final 25 miles (around 40 km) of Monday’s Stage 3 finish due to wildfires burning near Les Angles in southern France, where nearly 3,000 people were evacuated. The route remained unchanged at the start of the stage.

Formula One ⬆⬇ The Bahrain Grand Prix may be re-added to the calendar after it was canceled in March due to the U.S. and Israel war with Iran. Formula One CEO Stefano Domenicali told Sky Sports that the race would return “if the conditions are right.” The race would reportedly be placed in early October. Two races were canceled earlier this year—Bahrain and Saudi Arabia—trimming the F1 calendar from 24 races to 22. 

Pro Padel ⬆ The league has signed a deal with USA Sports to air five championship matches on CNBC during its 2026 season, its first time being broadcast exclusively on a national U.S. network. The deal covers Sunday championship matches from each of PPL’s five 2026 events, with the league planning to expand from five to ten events in 2027.

Coco Gauff ⬆ The American reached the Wimbledon quarterfinals for the first time Sunday, beating Belinda Bencic 4–6, 6–3, 6–4 with a service winner two minutes before the All England Lawn Tennis Club’s 11 p.m. curfew would have suspended play until Monday. Gauff will face fellow American Jessica Pegula in the quarterfinals July 7.

Editors’ Picks

Hot Takes on Folarin Balogun Red-Card Appeal Miss the Mark

by Michael McCarthy
FIFA has confirmed Balogun will be eligible to play on Monday.

FBI Arrests Ex-College Hoops Player in Multimillion-Dollar Fraud Case

by Ellyn Briggs
Kerr Kriisa played for Kentucky, West Virginia, Cincinnati, and Arizona between 2020 and 2026.

Rich Paul: LeBron Would Have Joined Knicks If Not for Title Win

by Ben Axelrod
Paul revealed the Knicks have checked in on James’s free agency.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Margaret Fleming
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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