USA face Belgium and World Cup date with destiny after Balogun reprieve
Youri Tielemans of Belgium celebrates scoring his team's third goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 32 match between Belgium and Senegal at Seattle Stadium on July 01, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. Alex Grimm/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by ALEX GRIMM / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)
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The United States face the biggest day of soccer in their
history on Monday as they take on Belgium for a place in the World Cup
quarter-finals after a dramatic reprieve for star striker Folarin Balogun
thanks to the intervention of Donald Trump.
Balogun, who has scored three goals at the World Cup, had
been set to miss the clash in Seattle after receiving a straight red card
following a video review for stepping on a Bosnia-Herzegovina defender's foot
in the round-of-32 match that the US won 2-0.
Under FIFA rules, a straight red card automatically triggers
a one-game ban.
Trump called FIFA chief Gianni Infantino asking him to
review Balogun's punishment, two sources familiar with the matter said.
World football's governing body said Sunday the ban will now
be suspended for a year, in a stunning move for which no specific explanation
was offered.
"Thank you to FIFA for doing what was right, and
reversing a great injustice!" Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
The US team welcomed the decision, which coach Mauricio
Pochettino called "fair", but it sparked outrage from Belgium and
other teams.
The Royal Belgian Football Association said it was
"astonished" and stressed it was "investigating all potential
options".
England coach Thomas Tuchel, asked about the Balogun case
after having one of his own players sent off in the nerve-jangling 3-2 win
against Mexico on Saturday, said: "Where does this start and end now? Can
we overturn it?
"Where to draw the line is the question I ask. Where
does this end now? It's my question, I don't have an answer."
The stakes in Monday's game are huge for the co-hosts.
Playing on home soil, a strong US start to the tournament has raised
expectations to fever-pitch levels among the American public.
Mauricio Pochettino's side are targeting a historic run to
at least the quarter-finals, which they have not reached since 2002.
Spain v
angry Ronaldo
In the first game Monday, European champions Spain face
neighbours Portugal in Dallas for a place in the last eight.
On Sunday, Portuguese superstar Cristiano Ronaldo came out
fighting against critics he said had been "trying to kill me for the past
23 years".
Ronaldo, 41, admitted he was not the player he used to be,
but said "I am not doing too bad", pointing to the three goals he has
scored at the tournament -- two against Uzbekistan in a 5-0 thrashing in the
group phase and a penalty in the 2-1 win over Croatia in the last 32.
Relishing taking on journalists eager to ask about his future
and the harsh spotlight on him, Ronaldo told reporters: "It's been like
this since I was 18, it is not going to change.
"I always put body and soul trying to get our goals --
playing or not playing, I will always have an important role to play."
Spain started this World Cup sluggishly but found their form
in breezing past Austria 3-0 in the last 32 and their own superstar,
18-year-old Lamine Yamal, is ready to showcase his precocious talents, coach
Luis de la Fuente said.
"He loves these kinds of games," de la Fuente
said. "He likes to be the focus, he likes the responsibility, he likes to
take the initiative."
England's victory in the Azteca on Sunday sees them move on
to a quarter-final against Norway next Saturday, after Erling Haaland produced two
stunning goals to dump Brazil out of the tournament with a 2-1 win.

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