World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
Ma Ning finally swapped the substitution board he held in his hand at the 2022 Qatar World Cup for the referee's whistle in 2026.
Ma Ning finally swapped the substitution board he held during the 2022 Qatar World Cup for the referee's whistle of the 2026 tournament.
At 42, he stood on a World Cup pitch as a head referee for the first time.
But FIFA's instructions for using this whistle were written with bias.
Ecuador against Curacao. A pure brawl between South American tough guys and Caribbean technical play—assigned to him.
When it came to the Group I top spot match between Norway and France, Ma Ning was back on the sidelines, holding the substitution board as the fourth official.
Counting his entire domestic league career, he has shown 925 yellow cards and 27 red cards.
This level of card-wielding is seen as deterrence in the meat grinder of CONCACAF and South America. But in the tactical battles of Europe's core, FIFA's Referees Committee simply dared not gamble.
Let him lead in low-stakes matches; let him run errands on the sidelines in high-stakes ones.
The shrewd folks in Zurich have drawn a line for referees from non-core regions—just that wide.
The scheduling in the core circle is all psychological warfare.
English star referee Michael Oliver missed the opening match between Ecuador and Ivory Coast. As soon as he returned, FIFA handed him two tough games: Netherlands vs. Sweden, and Norway vs. France.
Back-to-back matches are physically demanding. But the real kicker was his assignment for France's top-group match.
In the four games Oliver previously officiated involving the French team, Les Bleus had more losses than wins (specific record pending verification). Those dismal results were filled with painful memories. During its review, RMC Sport directly labeled him a "nemesis."
Stuffing an English referee with such a superstitious lens into France's life-or-death match for the top spot.
A blind draw couldn't produce such a script.
This is FIFA's balancing act among European powers, using psychological pressure to mess with Les Bleus' heads.
Before the whistle even sounds, the blood pressure in the locker room is already through the roof.
Jordanian referee Adham Makhadmeh, Moroccan referee Jalal Jiyed, and Romanian referee Istvan Kovacs.
These individuals have gathered to secure group-stage officiating rights.
Six North American venues, including Houston and Dallas, are preparing to host 48 teams, and the referee pool is being massively expanded.
FIFA officials keep emphasizing representation from all confederations. In plain English, that's political patronage.
Expanding the team count is about handing out votes to the AFC and CAF; expanding the referee pool is about paying protection money.
Forty-eight teams have inflated the World Cup to enormous proportions.
All those extra whistles are just padding soaked in human connections and favoritism.