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‘Corruption’ Allegations Fly as Controversial Referee Decision Dents US World Cup Hopes

After two players fell to the ground in a tangle of legs during Wednesday night’s match between the United States and Bosnia-Herzegovina, a referee made a call that could hurt America’s hopes in the World Cup tournament.

Star forward Folarin Balogun was hit with a red card after he dragged his cleats onto the back of a Bosnian player’s leg and onto his foot, according to ESPN.

The call was made after a video review.

The call was criticized by Clay Travis, who posted his fury on X.

“It’s impossible to defend this call. Impossible. Ref should be fired and investigated for corruption,” he posted.

Was this a bad call?

Although the call did not stop the U.S. team from defeating Bosnia-Herzegovina 2-0, the real impact will come in the American team’s next game against Belgium.

Tournament rules require that any player slapped with a red card for a foul must sit out his team’s next game.

Journalist Marc Caputo was irate about the call.

Related:

Politico: Dems Patriotism Problems So Bad They Have Issues Rooting for US World Cup Success

“Folarin Balogun drew the red card for one simple reason: @FIFAWorldCup is corrupt. Dirty refs need to rig the next game against the U.S. by knocking out its leading goal-scorer from the next game,” he posted on X.

Coach Mauricio Pochettino said Balogun was “sad” and “disappointed,” and also disputed the call, according to ESPN.

“For me, never is it a red card,” Pochettino said. “Never was there intention to step on the player.”

“If the intention is to damage the opponent, OK, I understand. But that was a normal action in football that you are, you know, fighting for the ball and your feet land, no?” he said.

“I think in this stage of the tournament where every player is important, I think it’s a bit bogus,” midfielder Weston McKennie said after learning there is no appeal process.

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