The Independent
·6 luglio 2026
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Yahoo sportsThe Independent
·6 luglio 2026
England are in a precarious position when it comes to discipline at the World Cup, with certain players in danger of missing the semi-finals if the Three Lions get past Norway in the last eight.
On Sunday – or the early hours of Monday morning, for viewers in England – Thomas Tuchel’s side emerged as 3-2 winners over Mexico in Mexico City, surviving a rollercoaster game in which Jude Bellingham netted twice and Harry Kane scored from the spot.
But another key moment saw England right-back Jarell Quansah given a straight red card for a high challenge on Jesus Gallardo, while four teammates were booked: defenders Marc Guehi and Nico O’Reilly, and midfielders Declan Rice and Jordan Henderson.
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England's Declan Rice is shown a yellow card by referee (Reuters)
In the previous game, a last-32 win over DR Congo, Bellingham received a yellow card.
But what do these bookings mean for England against Norway, and then in the semi-finals if England get that far?
First things first: group-stage yellow cards were wiped out after the group stage, so they are irrelevant here. With that in mind, here’s all you need to know:
If a player picks up two yellow cards overall across the last 32, last 16 and quarter-finals, they will be suspended.
The suspension lasts just one game, so if a player were booked in the last 32 and last 16, they would miss a quarter-final; or if they were booked in the last 32/last 16 and the quarter-finals, they would miss a semi-final.
Yellow cards reset after the semi-finals, so a booking in the semi-finals does not rule a player out of the final, regardless of what happened in their previous knockout games.
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Jarell Quansah was shown a straight red against Mexico (Getty)
A red card (whether a straight red or the result of two yellows in one game) equals a one game ban.
However, a shocking move saw Fifa suspend the red card of USA striker Florian Balogun – earned against Bosnia in the last 32 – by a year, meaning he will be able to feature in their last-16 tie against Belgium.
Donald Trump then thanked Fifa, sparking theories that the US president’s administration had pushed for the punishment to be overturned.
There is no reset on red cards, so to speak, meaning: if a player is sent off in a semi-final, they will miss the final.
These players must avoid a booking against Norway to be eligible in the semi-finals, if England get that far: Jude Bellingham, Declan Rice, Marc Guehi, Nico O’Reilly, Jordan Henderson.
Jarell Quansah’s red card in the last 16 means he will miss the quarter-final, but he will be back in the semi-finals if England make it to that stage.
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