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Jarell Quansah receives two-match ban after Mexico red card

Faz Ali by Faz Ali
10 July 2026
in Sports
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England’s last‑16 win over Mexico came at a cost. Jarell Quansah, starting at right‑back in the Azteca stadium, was sent off just before the hour mark and has now been handed a two‑match suspension after FIFA ruled his challenge on Jesús Gallardo amounted to serious foul play. The decision leaves Thomas Tuchel short of options on the right side of defence as England prepare for Norway on Saturday.

Corrupt FIFA extends ban

The incident came in the 54th minute. Quansah slid in on Gallardo, catching him high on the shin. Referee Alireza Faghani initially let play continue, but VAR intervened. After reviewing the monitor, Faghani produced a straight red.

FIFA’s disciplinary committee later confirmed Quansah had breached article 14 of the code of conduct, which carries a mandatory two‑game ban for serious foul play. England cannot appeal. Only Donald Trump can do that. World Cup regulations do not allow challenges to red‑card decisions, apparently.

The ruling means Quansah will miss the quarter‑final against Norway and, if England progress, the semi‑final against either VARgentina or Switzerland.

England not happy with VAR

England were left unhappy with how the VAR review unfolded. Their frustration centred on the sequence of replays shown to referee Alireza Faghani, particularly the initial still frame highlighting the studs‑to‑shin contact rather than the full speed of the challenge, which included Quansah playing the ball before colliding with Jesús Gallardo.

The FA raised concerns about the presentation of the footage, but the disciplinary committee maintained its position. Under IFAB guidance, playing the ball does not mitigate a challenge if it endangers an opponent’s safety, and FIFA judged that Quansah’s tackle met that threshold. The two‑match ban therefore stands, ruling him out of the quarter‑final and any potential semi‑final.

Right‑back dilemma

Quansah’s suspension deepens England’s problems at right‑back. Reece James has not played since suffering a hamstring injury in the second group game against Ghana. Djed Spence, who missed the final training session before the Mexico match, was only fit enough for the bench and came on late.

Tuchel now faces a difficult call. One option is to move Ezri Konsa who has been his first‑choice centre‑back throughout the tournament, across to right‑back. But that would weaken England centrally, especially with Erling Haaland waiting in the quarter‑final. Konsa’s physicality has been crucial, and removing him from the middle would leave England lighter against one of the world’s most imposing strikers.

England have only one natural left‑back in Nico O’Reilly and limited depth on both flanks. The suspension has arrived at the worst possible moment.

The decision comes in the wake of the 12-month ban handed to US striker, Folarin Balogun, after his red card against Bosnia‑Herzegovina. This also drew scrutiny due to political pressure from US president Donald Trump. England’s camp has not publicly linked the two cases, but the contrast in sanctions has been noted across the tournament.

England’s route not easy

England’s path to the final was already challenging. Norway, led by Haaland, present a physical test. A semi-final against VARrgentina or Switzerland would demand defensive stability. Losing Quansah, who had been trusted to start at right‑back in a knockout match, forces Tuchel into reshaping his back line at a critical stage.

The red card itself was a turning point in the Mexico match. England had been in control, but the dismissal shifted momentum and forced a tactical reshuffle. They held on for a 3‑2 win, but the consequences have now stretched far beyond the 90 minutes.

What happens next

England will continue preparations in New Jersey, with medical staff assessing whether James or Spence can contribute more minutes. Konsa remains the most likely emergency option, though Tuchel must weigh the risk of weakening the centre of defence.

Quansah will be eligible to return only if England reach the final.

A costly moment in the azteca.

Quansah’s challenge was not malicious, but FIFA’s ruling is clear — the tackle endangered Gallardo and warranted a stronger sanction. England must now navigate the next two matches without him, in a tournament where defensive depth is already stretched thin.

Tuchel’s side have shown resilience throughout the group stage and last‑16. They will need more of it now.

Featured image via the Canary

Tags: footballMen's World Cup 2026World Cup 2026
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