This is a list of all occasions where a
football player was sent off from a
FIFA World Cup match due to a
foul or misconduct, either as a direct expulsion (red card) or as a second caution (yellow card) within the match.
This list includes all dismissals since the
first World Cup in 1930. The use of physical red and yellow cards to respectively indicate dismissals and cautions is a later invention, having been introduced at the
1970 tournament.
Only players are listed, even if they were at the substitutes' bench at the time of the sending off.
Managers and other technical staff members are not covered.
Statistics
Plácido Galindo was the first player to be sent off in a World Cup match, playing for Peru against Romania in a 1930 match officiated by
Alberto Warnken. Although physical red cards were introduced from 1970, they were not put in practice until the 1974 World Cup, when referee
Doğan Babacan sent off Chile's
Carlos Caszely during a match against West Germany.
Two players have received red cards twice: Cameroon's
Rigobert Song (1994 and 1998) and France's
Zinedine Zidane (1998 and 2006).
Uruguay's
José Batista received the quickest red card, in the first minute in a game against Scotland in 1986.
A few expulsions either took place after the final whistle of the match or were awarded to players at the substitutes' bench (or both), and thus did not reduce the number of players on the pitch during the game. Two of them, that of
Leandro Cufré of Argentina (vs Germany, 2006) and that of
Denzel Dumfries of the Netherlands (vs Argentina, 2022), took place after the penalty shoot-outs of knockout matches, making them the latest red cards.
The referee who has sent off the most players is
Arturo Brizio Carter, 7 red cards, in 5 different matches (also a record).
The team that has the greatest number of expulsed players is Brazil, with 11 – in 9 different matches, a record shared with Argentina. The team whose opponents have received the most red cards is Germany (incl. West Germany), with 20 – in 18 different matches, also a record.
The
2006 World Cup had the largest number of red cards: a total of 28 players were sent off (in 20 matches, also a record).
Notable incidents
Of more than two dozen matches that had multiple player expulsions, a few are remembered for their exceptional violence and brutality: the "
Battle of Bordeaux" (Brazil vs Czechoslovakia, 1938), the "
Battle of Berne" (Hungary vs Brazil, 1954), the "
Battle of Santiago" (Chile vs Italy, 1962), and the "
Battle of Nuremberg" (Portugal vs Netherlands, 2006).
During
a 2010 quarter-final against Ghana, with the score tied at 1–1 going into stoppage time of the second period of
extra time, Uruguayan striker
Luis Suárez was red carded after famously denying a goal-bound header with his hand. Ghana missed the resulting penalty and went on to lose the subsequent penalty shoot-out; with a victory they would have become the first ever African team to reach the final four of the competition.
During
the 2006 final, French captain
Zinedine Zidane was sent off after he famously headbutted Italy's
Marco Materazzi in the chest, after a verbal provocation by Materazzi. This was the final act of Zidane's professional career, as he remained committed to his pre-tournament decision to retire after the tournament. France lost the final on penalties.
During
a 2006 match between Croatia and Australia, referee
Graham Poll failed to send off Croatian player
Josip Šimunić after the second yellow card, and only did so when he issued a third one, right after the final whistle minutes later. FIFA's report on the match initially listed all three bookings, but later the second one was removed; it is not known if the booking was retroactively overturned, or if this was done for report consistency purposes only.
This is a list of all occasions where a
football player was sent off from a
FIFA World Cup match due to a
foul or misconduct, either as a direct expulsion (red card) or as a second caution (yellow card) within the match.
This list includes all dismissals since the
first World Cup in 1930. The use of physical red and yellow cards to respectively indicate dismissals and cautions is a later invention, having been introduced at the
1970 tournament.
Only players are listed, even if they were at the substitutes' bench at the time of the sending off.
Managers and other technical staff members are not covered.
Statistics
Plácido Galindo was the first player to be sent off in a World Cup match, playing for Peru against Romania in a 1930 match officiated by
Alberto Warnken. Although physical red cards were introduced from 1970, they were not put in practice until the 1974 World Cup, when referee
Doğan Babacan sent off Chile's
Carlos Caszely during a match against West Germany.
Two players have received red cards twice: Cameroon's
Rigobert Song (1994 and 1998) and France's
Zinedine Zidane (1998 and 2006).
Uruguay's
José Batista received the quickest red card, in the first minute in a game against Scotland in 1986.
A few expulsions either took place after the final whistle of the match or were awarded to players at the substitutes' bench (or both), and thus did not reduce the number of players on the pitch during the game. Two of them, that of
Leandro Cufré of Argentina (vs Germany, 2006) and that of
Denzel Dumfries of the Netherlands (vs Argentina, 2022), took place after the penalty shoot-outs of knockout matches, making them the latest red cards.
The referee who has sent off the most players is
Arturo Brizio Carter, 7 red cards, in 5 different matches (also a record).
The team that has the greatest number of expulsed players is Brazil, with 11 – in 9 different matches, a record shared with Argentina. The team whose opponents have received the most red cards is Germany (incl. West Germany), with 20 – in 18 different matches, also a record.
The
2006 World Cup had the largest number of red cards: a total of 28 players were sent off (in 20 matches, also a record).
Notable incidents
Of more than two dozen matches that had multiple player expulsions, a few are remembered for their exceptional violence and brutality: the "
Battle of Bordeaux" (Brazil vs Czechoslovakia, 1938), the "
Battle of Berne" (Hungary vs Brazil, 1954), the "
Battle of Santiago" (Chile vs Italy, 1962), and the "
Battle of Nuremberg" (Portugal vs Netherlands, 2006).
During
a 2010 quarter-final against Ghana, with the score tied at 1–1 going into stoppage time of the second period of
extra time, Uruguayan striker
Luis Suárez was red carded after famously denying a goal-bound header with his hand. Ghana missed the resulting penalty and went on to lose the subsequent penalty shoot-out; with a victory they would have become the first ever African team to reach the final four of the competition.
During
the 2006 final, French captain
Zinedine Zidane was sent off after he famously headbutted Italy's
Marco Materazzi in the chest, after a verbal provocation by Materazzi. This was the final act of Zidane's professional career, as he remained committed to his pre-tournament decision to retire after the tournament. France lost the final on penalties.
During
a 2006 match between Croatia and Australia, referee
Graham Poll failed to send off Croatian player
Josip Šimunić after the second yellow card, and only did so when he issued a third one, right after the final whistle minutes later. FIFA's report on the match initially listed all three bookings, but later the second one was removed; it is not known if the booking was retroactively overturned, or if this was done for report consistency purposes only.