FIFA World Cup 2026: 17 players face suspension risk before quarterfinals

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FIFA World Cup 2026: 17 players face suspension risk before quarterfinals

Synopsis

Seventeen players — including Jude Bellingham, Achraf Hakimi, and Granit Xhaka — enter the 2026 World Cup quarterfinals one yellow card from a semifinal ban. England lead the disciplinary danger list with four players at risk, while the Morocco-France tie carries the heaviest combined suspension stakes of any quarterfinal.

Key Takeaways

17 players across the remaining teams are one yellow card away from a 2026 FIFA World Cup semifinal suspension.
England have four players at risk: Jude Bellingham , Marc Guehi , Declan Rice , and Nico O'Reilly .
Morocco have four players on the disciplinary edge — Issa Diop , Achraf Hakimi , Redouane Halhal , and Bilal El Khannouss — ahead of their quarterfinal against France .
Switzerland risk losing captain Granit Xhaka , Denis Zakaria , and Miro Muheim if bookings go against them.
Argentina have just one player at risk — defender Gonzalo Montiel — and the most restrained foul-to-booking ratio at 19.7 fouls per card .
England have been booked once per 7.7 fouls , the sharpest disciplinary rate among contenders.

Seventeen players enter the 2026 FIFA World Cup quarterfinals just one yellow card away from a suspension, placing several title contenders at risk of fielding weakened lineups in the semifinals. The disciplinary stakes are particularly high for England and Morocco, who each have multiple key players walking a booking tightrope.

How the Suspension Rule Works

Yellow cards accumulated during the group stage were wiped clean before the knockout rounds began. However, any player who collects two bookings between the round of 32 and the quarterfinals will be automatically suspended for the semifinals — provided their team advances. The rule effectively resets the clock but creates fresh jeopardy at the business end of the tournament.

England's Disciplinary Danger

England arguably face the steepest risk. Jude Bellingham, Marc Guehi, Declan Rice, and Nico O'Reilly are all one caution away from missing a potential semifinal. The quartet represents the spine of Gareth Southgate's side — losing even one of them could significantly alter England's tactical shape. Notably, Jordan Henderson entered the knockout stage already carrying a booking but has since been ruled out through injury after breaking his wrist, removing him from the suspension equation entirely.

Morocco, France, and Switzerland at Risk

Morocco have four players in the danger zone ahead of their quarterfinal against France: Issa Diop, Achraf Hakimi, Redouane Halhal, and Bilal El Khannouss. Their opponents France are not immune either, with forward Michael Olise and midfielder Manu Kone both one yellow card from a ban. The Morocco-France tie is therefore the single quarterfinal carrying the heaviest combined suspension risk.

Switzerland could be without three influential players if bookings go against them — captain Granit Xhaka, Denis Zakaria, and Miro Muheim are all at risk. Norway winger Antonio Nusa is also one caution away from suspension.

Spain, Belgium, and Argentina

In Friday's quarterfinal between Spain and Belgium, Spain forward Ferran Torres — who impressed off the bench in the round-of-16 win over Portugal — and Belgium defender Brandon Mechele are both one booking from a ban. Argentina, by contrast, have only one player at risk: defender Gonzalo Montiel, the lone member of Lionel Scaloni's squad facing suspension.

Discipline by the Numbers

Disciplinary records have varied sharply across the remaining teams. Argentina have received one yellow card for every 19.7 fouls committed during the tournament — the most restrained ratio among contenders. England, at the other extreme, have been booked once for every 7.7 fouls, a figure that underscores the elevated risk their players carry into the quarterfinals. How referees manage the physicality of these matches could prove as decisive as the football itself.

With the semifinals now within reach for eight nations, the quarterfinals will be defined not just by tactics and form, but by the discipline — or lack thereof — of players already on the edge.

Point of View

Drawing fouls to push Bellingham or Rice closer to a ban. The Morocco-France tie is the most combustible from a disciplinary standpoint, with eight combined players across both squads at risk. Referees at this stage tend to manage the game rather than police it, but one contentious decision could remove a match-winner from the semifinals entirely. The teams that win this round with their squads intact may have as much of an advantage as those who win on the scoreboard.
NationPress
10 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Which players are at risk of suspension in the 2026 FIFA World Cup quarterfinals?
Seventeen players across the remaining teams are one yellow card away from a semifinal ban. Notable names include England's Jude Bellingham, Declan Rice, Marc Guehi, and Nico O'Reilly; Morocco's Achraf Hakimi and Bilal El Khannouss; and Switzerland's Granit Xhaka.
How does the World Cup suspension rule work in the knockout stage?
Yellow cards from the group stage are wiped before the knockout rounds begin. Any player who receives two yellow cards between the round of 32 and the quarterfinals is automatically suspended for the semifinals if their team qualifies.
Why do England have the most to lose from suspensions?
England have four key players — Jude Bellingham, Marc Guehi, Declan Rice, and Nico O'Reilly — all one booking from a ban. They also have the sharpest foul-to-booking ratio among contenders, receiving a yellow card for every 7.7 fouls committed, making further cautions statistically likely.
Which quarterfinal carries the highest combined suspension risk?
The Morocco vs France quarterfinal carries the heaviest combined disciplinary risk, with Morocco fielding four players on the edge and France having two — Michael Olise and Manu Kone — also at risk of missing a semifinal.
Which team has the best disciplinary record at the 2026 World Cup?
Argentina have the most restrained disciplinary record, receiving one yellow card for every 19.7 fouls committed during the tournament. They also have just one player — defender Gonzalo Montiel — facing suspension risk heading into the quarterfinals.
Nation Press
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