Sports
Vikings Sneak in Another Free Agent Signing
The Minnesota Vikings have now added six new defensive tackles to the 90-man roster since the start of the offseason, onboarding veteran Isaiahh Loudermilk from the Pittsburgh Steelers on Thursday as the latest addition.
Minnesota continues to tweak the bottom of its defensive line room after earlier offseason moves changed the depth chart.
The team cut ties with Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave in March and hasn’t been shy about welcoming newcomers.
Loudermilk Joins a Crowded DT Battle
The Loudermilk era in the Twin Cities is here.
Loudermilk to MIN
This one is official. Vikings.com’s Lindsey Young wrote Thursday, “The Vikings are adding a veteran defensive lineman to the roster. Minnesota has signed Isaiahh Loudermilk, the team announced Thursday. Originally a fifth-round selection by Pittsburgh in the 2021 NFL Draft, Loudermilk has played 60 games (seven starts) and totaled 63 tackles, 1.0 sack and six passes defensed for the Steelers.”
“In three postseason appearances, he’s recorded six tackles. Loudermilk overlapped in Pittsburgh with Vikings Defensive Coordinator Brian Flores (2022) and Defensive Pass Game Coordinator & Defensive Backs Coach Gerald Alexander (2022-23). Loudermilk played collegiately at Wisconsin from 2016-20.”
Loudermilk was a college teammate of Indianapolis Colts running back Jonathan Taylor at Wisconsin.
The Career Biography
The Steelers pulled Loudermilk from Round 5 of the 2021 NFL Draft, two days after the Vikings picked Christian Darrisaw. He’s 6’7″ and nearly 300 pounds, posting 5.08 speed before turning pro five years ago. Loudermilk has appeared in 60 games through five seasons, starting 7 and banking 63 tackles and a sack. He suffered a high ankle sprain last September — right around the time that the same injury beset Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy — and did not play the rest of the year.
SI.com‘s Christian Borman noted on Loudermilk’s production at Wisconsin: ‘During his time in Madison, Loudermilk was a solid presence along the Badgers’ defensive line and a highly productive player. In 40 games with Wisconsin, he totaled 63 total tackles, 11.5 tackles for a loss, 7.5 sacks, and nine passes defended. Loudermilk will lean on his experience to earn a spot on the Vikings team that desperately needs someone to make an impact from the defensive line position.”
The best way to think of Loudermilk is depth and insurance. He is not a starting-caliber player, or at least has shown no such inclinations in Pittsburgh.
His Pro Football Focus scorecard:
2025 — 32.8
2024 — 59.3
2023 — 55.3
2022 — 42.2
2021 — 44.9
Specifically via run defense:
2025 — 31.0
2024 — 63.9
2023 — 58.0
2022 — 43.5
2021 — 45.2
And the pass rush:
2025 — 59.1
2024 — 55.2
2023 — 47.2
2022 — 49.0
2021 — 50.0
He’s a less productive version of Jonathan Bullard from Vikings’ seasons past. SteelersDepot‘s Ross McCorkle on Loudermilk: “Loudermilk also visited the Detroit Lions earlier in the offseason but generally didn’t seem to draw much interest around the league as a free agent. With Loudermilk gone, Pat Freiermuth is the lone member of the Steelers’ 2021 draft class left on the roster.”
“With the 2022 draft class already wiped out, Kevin Colbert’s fingerprints on the roster are rapidly fading with just five of his drafted players left on the team. Loudermilk was selected by the Steelers—who traded up for him—in the fifth round of the 2021 NFL Draft out of the University of Wisconsin. He stuck around for his whole rookie contract and was brought back on a one-year deal prior to the 2025 season.”
The DT Room in Late May
Sans Allen and Hargrave, these are the Vikings’ defensive tackles nearing June:
- Jalen Redmond
- Caleb Banks
- Domonique Orange
- Levi Drake Rodriguez
- Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins
- Isaiahh Loudermilk
- Eric Johnson
- Taki Taimani
- Elijah Williams
- Monkell Goodwine
- Smith Vilbert
Last year, entering Week 1, Minnesota kept six DTs on the 53-man roster. If that trend continues for Flores, Loudermilk would straddle the roster bubble in August, hoping to stave off Johnson, Taimani, and Williams for DT6.
Roster Trajectory + Upcoming FA Moves
Because of his experience, fans should tentatively expect Loudermilk to make the cut. He may be evenly matched against Johnson for the final DT spot, but Loudermilk has previous ties to Flores and Alexander. Otherwise, if Loudermilk is the odd man out, the practice squad feels like a reasonable fallback.
On other free agents, the Vikings might need an extra linebacker after trading Jonathan Greenard in April. A.J. Epenesa, Cameron Jordan, Denico Autry, Derek Barnett, Haason Reddick, Jadeveon Clowney, Joey Bosa, Kyle Van Noy, Leonard Floyd, Marcus Davenport, and Von Miller are available on the open market.
In theory, Minnesota could also add one more cornerback for depth. Last year’s CB3, Fabian Moreau, as an example, is unsigned through 2.5 months of free agency.
Loudermilk will turn 29 in October.
Sports
Three Reasons Why Bafana Bafana Lost the 2026 FIFA World Cup Opener
South Africa’s return to the FIFA World Cup ended in disappointment as Bafana Bafana suffered a 2-0 defeat to hosts Mexico at the Estadio Azteca.
Goals from Julián Quiñones and Raúl Jiménez gave Mexico a historic victory in the opening match of the expanded 48-team tournament. While South Africa showed moments of determination, several factors contributed to their downfall.
Here are three reasons why Hugo Broos’ side lost their opening game.
1. Playing the Host Nation Was Always Going to Be Difficult

Facing the host country in a World Cup opener is one of the toughest challenges in football. Mexico had the advantage of playing in front of a passionate home crowd at the famous Estadio Azteca, with thousands of supporters cheering every attack and creating a hostile atmosphere for the visitors.
South Africa struggled to settle into the game as the crowd constantly backed Mexico and piled pressure on Bafana Bafana. The hosts fed off the energy from the stands and quickly took control of the contest.
2. South Africa Started the Match With Too Much Fear
The approach taken by coach Hugo Broos raised questions from the start. South Africa lined up in a defensive 5-3-2 formation, showing respect for Mexico but perhaps too much respect.
Rather than trying to impose themselves on the game, Bafana Bafana sat deep and allowed Mexico to dominate possession. The plan backfired when a defensive mistake gifted Quiñones the opening goal after only nine minutes.
Conceding so early destroyed South Africa’s game plan and forced them to chase a match they never looked capable of controlling.
3. The Red Card Made a Bad Situation Worse

South Africa were already struggling before Yaya Sithole was sent off in the 49th minute after bringing down a Mexican player as the last defender.
Playing with ten men against the hosts was always going to be a huge task. Mexico took advantage of the extra space and eventually doubled their lead through Raúl Jiménez.
Things became even worse when Themba Zwane received a second red card late in the game, leaving South Africa with only nine players. A team that entered the match cautiously was always likely to suffer after losing players.
In truth, the 2-0 scoreline was probably kind to Bafana Bafana. Mexico hit the woodwork and created several other chances that could have made the defeat much heavier.
Final Thoughts
Mexico deserved their victory and made history by winning a World Cup opening match for the first time. Quiñones’ early goal set the tone for the evening, while South Africa’s defensive mistakes, cautious approach and disciplinary problems combined to hand the hosts a comfortable win.
If Bafana Bafana are to progress in the tournament, they must play with greater confidence and avoid the costly errors that ruined their World Cup opener.
Sports
Five co-leaders at 6 under after first round of RBC Canadian Open
Four golfers stormed up the leaderboard to join Sahith Theegala in a five-way tie for first after one round of the RBC Canadian Open.
Theegala fired a 6-under 64 during the morning wave at TPC Toronto to take the first-round clubhouse lead and then Emilliano Grillo, Eric Cole, Brooks Koepka and Sam Burns matched that performance in the afternoon.
Adam Svensson of Surrey, B.C., was in a nine-way tie for second, a shot back of the leaders.
A heavy rainfall around 10 a.m. local time softened the North Course, but as the temperature rose in the afternoon birdies remained gettable.
Reigning champion Ryan Fox of New Zealand shot a 4-under 66 to sit in a tie for 15th.
Fox was in the day’s marquee group with Nick Taylor of Abbotsford, B.C., who won the national men’s golf championship in 2023. Taylor was 3 under.
Sports
Tyler Phillips shines as hot Marlins blank Diamondbacks
Jun 11, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Marlins pitcher Tyler Phillips (30) throws in the first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images Tyler Phillips pitched five scoreless innings as the Miami Marlins won their fifth straight game, defeating the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks 2-0 on Thursday afternoon.
The Marlins have won eight of their past nine games, and this was Miami’s fourth sweep of the season.
It was also Miami’s 23rd home win of the season – the most in the National League at 23-16.
Phillips (1-1) allowed just two hits and two walks, lowering his ERA to 1.86. Since joining the Marlins at the start of last season, it was his 73rd appearance but just his fourth start. It was also tied for his longest outing since joining Miami.
Marlins shortstop Otto Lopez – who leads the majors with a .344 batting average – went 2-for-4. He leads the league with 29 multi-hit games, and he added two steals on Thursday.
Miami’s bullpen – Michael Petersen; Anthony Bender; Calvin Faucher and Pete Fairbanks – combined for four scoreless innings, allowing just one hit. Fairbanks got the save, his eighth of the year.
Arizona is just 3-10 over its past 13 games. The Diamondbacks have been shut out in two consecutive games, putting up a total of just nine hits in that span.
In the series, Arizona went 2-for-30 with runners in scoring position. Merrill Kelly (5-5) pitched a quality start but took the loss, allowing two runs, four hits and two walks in six innings.
Miami scored just one run in the first inning despite putting together two singles, a balk due to disengagement, a walk, a steal and a sacrifice fly. Leadoff batter Liam Hicks singled and was thrown out at third on Lopez’s single as right fielder Corbin Carroll unleashed a strong one-hop throw.
The Marlins may not have scored in that inning at all because Lopez was originally called out trying to steal third. But the call was reversed on review, and Lopez scored on the next pitch as Xavier Edwards lofted a sacrifice fly.
Miami made it 2-0 in the fourth as Kyle Stowers walked, advanced on Edwards’ single and scored on a two-out single by Jakob Marsee on a 3-2 pitch that was high and out of the zone. Arizona threatened in the seventh as LuJames Groover singled and went to third with one out on an error by first baseman Stowers on a failed pickoff. But Bender got out of the jam with two strikeouts.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Browns re-sign starting S Ronnie Hickman
Dec 21, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Browns safety Ronnie Hickman (33) is introduced prior to a game against the Buffalo Bills at Huntington Bank Field. Mandatory Credit: Scott Galvin-Imagn Images Cleveland Browns starting safety Ronnie Hickman signed his restricted free agent tender on Thursday.
Contract terms were not announced. Multiple reports said Hickman, 24, will earn $5.8 million in 2026 and become an unrestricted free agent after the season.
The April 17 deadline had passed for restricted free agents to sign with another team, which would have returned a second-round draft pick to the Browns if they didn’t match the offer.
Hickman started all 17 games for Cleveland last season and set career highs with 103 tackles, two interceptions and seven passes defensed. He played 99% of the defensive snaps (1,039) and 32% of special teams snaps (145). For his career, he has 173 tackles, three interceptions — one returned for a touchdown — and 11 passes defended in 41 regular-season games (26 starts) since signing as an undrafted free agent out of Ohio State in May 2023.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Mexico beats South Africa in 2026 World Cup opening match at home
2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off: Simon Jordan discusses US soccer growth
Talksport presenter Simon Jordan discusses the 2026 FIFA World Cup kickoff in Mexico, highlighting its immense global and growing U.S. influence. Jordan notes soccer’s rise to the third most popular sport in America, surpassing baseball and hockey. He is optimistic about the record-breaking tournament, expected to sell 6.5 million tickets, despite past World Cup challenges.
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The first of 104 World Cup matches was won by the country that hosted the start of the tournament.
Mexico took down South Africa, 2-0, in Mexico City after Estadio Azteca played host to the World Cup opening ceremonies.
Mexico was the better team from the jump, scoring in the ninth minute after already having two corner kicks.
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Raul Jimenez celebrates with teammates after scoring Mexico’s second goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group A match against South Africa at Mexico City Stadium on June 11, 2026. (Hector Vivas/FIFA via Getty Images)
A pass from South Africa’s goalie got away from a teammate and was picked off by Erik Lira. The ball was then taken by Julián Quiñones, who took just one dribble toward the middle of the field and ripped a right-footed shot into the net, putting the crowd into a frenzy.
Hopes of a South African comeback took a hit when Yaya Sithole was given a red card in the 50th minute for bringing Mexico’s Brian Gutiérrez on what would have been a breakaway.
From then on, South Africa was playing with 10 men, making it an even larger mountain to climb.

Mexico players applaud fans during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group A match between Mexico and South Africa at Mexico City Stadium in Mexico City on June 11, 2026. (Angel Delgado/Getty Images)
The dagger came in the 67th minute, when Raúl Jiménez scored a header on a perfect cross from Roberto Alvarado, making it a 2-0 game. Playing in his fourth World Cup, it was Jiménez’s first goal in tournament history, and he could not help but let out his emotions.
South Africa was hit with one more red card in the 84th minute, and Mexico was given one in the 92nd minute. South Africa’s Sithole and Themba Zwane, as well as Mexico’s César Montes, will each miss their next games against Czechia in Atlanta and Korea in Guadalajara, respectively.
In World Cup history, Mexico has now won 15 of the 23 matches in which it has scored first, drawing five and losing three.
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Estadio Azteca, renamed Mexico City Stadium for the tournament, held the tournament’s opening ceremonies, during which all 48 competing countries were represented. FIFA President Gianni Infantino was in the building with the FIFA World Cup Trophy.

Mexico’s forward Julian Quinones celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the 2026 World Cup Group A match against South Africa at Mexico City Stadium in Mexico City on June 11, 2026. (Rodrigo Oropeza/AFP via Getty Images)
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Mexico is coming off a disappointing trip to Qatar, as it was the first time since 1978 that it competed in a World Cup and did not make it to the knockout stage. Aside from its ban in 1990 and not qualifying in 1982, it had made it past the group stage in nine straight World Cups it played in.
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Sports
Vikings Coach Will Feed the Hype with Latest Update
Ask Vikings coach Matt Daniels and there’s not much of an issue with Brett Thorson holding. Or, at least, with catching the snap from the long snapper.
The talented rookie punter is the underdog in his competition against veteran Johnny Hekker, who received a single-season deal worth $1.262 million on the cap (OTC). Every penny will stick around as dead money if he gets cut.
Still, Thorson was brought to town for a reason. He boasts a booming punt, capable of offering his team healthy field position. Thorson is operating under a UDFA contract that sees just $90,000 guaranteed. In other words, cutting him won’t be any hindrance to the cap if things don’t work out.
What’s working in his favor, though, is his youth, upside, and capacity to settle in as a holder.
Vikings Coach Matt Daniels Believes Rookie Punter Can Hold
Gone are the days of Tony Romo – and, more accurately, the currently playing QBs – holding the ball for PAT and FG. Rather, the job responsibility has shifted to the punter, the specialist who spends his days working with the other specialists. Giving him the added workload makes all the sense in the world.
Per Daniels, the Kirby Smart approach of not leaning on his punter is derivative of the Bill Parcells approach. Once upon a time, Mike Zimmer was the head coach of the Vikings. Notably, he’s a Parcells disciple. Every so often, Zimmer would make headlines for his comments on kickers. Did he ever oversimplify the kicking/holding operation?
More pertinent for right now: can Thorson overcome his inexperience as a holder to secure the P1 spot in 2026?
Check out what Matt Daniels had to say: “Obviously, coming out of Georgia, Kirby is really from a Parcells tree […] where the quarterbacks are the holders.” Not long afterwards, Coach Daniels noted Thorson’s “great hands” before describing that the focus is on placing the ball down cleanly and at the correct angle for Will Reichard.
Therein lies the key, folks: working in a way that makes Reichard comfortable.
Earlier in the same presser, Coach Daniels described how Reichard keeps “chasing” perfection. Doing so means adjusting his mechanics in an effort to drill the football perfectly straight rather than last year’s approach, one involving a “little baby draw.”
Any punter who can’t allow Reichard to thrive isn’t going to be employed by the Minnesota Vikings.
“I watched over 300 snaps of this guy at practice and there’s no issue with the holding,” Daniels went on to say of Thorson.
Last year, Oscar Chapman competed with Ryan Wright to be the team’s starting punter. In all likelihood, Mr. Wright — somebody who offered an exclusive for VT — would have won the job no matter what, but Chapman appeared to bobble the ball at one point. That didn’t help, folks.
At this stage, Johnny Hekker appears to be a 99.9% certainty to handle the snap from long snapper Andrew DePaola cleanly. He is, like all of us, human, meaning he’ll make mistakes. What he nevertheless offers is a high degree of consistency. At no point will he be nervous about catching a heater from DePaola.
Brett Thorson has a longer runway in the NFL since he’s still a young fella. Quite possibly, he’ll be able to punt the ball for greater distance while offering better hang time, too. But then there’s the other aspect of the job: holding. That small does detail matters.
Put bluntly, the Vikings cannot chase upside at punter at the risk of undermining elite play from Reichard.
Matt Daniels has a few months before needing to make a final call. The punter battle will get rolling in late July when the Vikings return for training camp.
Sports
1st Time In FIFA World Cup History: 3 Red Cards In Mexico vs South Africa Opener Breaks All-Time Record
Mexico ignited their FIFA World Cup 2026 party with a dominant 2-0 victory over nine-man South Africa on Thursday as the biggest ever edition of the global footballing showpiece kicked off at the iconic Estadio Azteca. Julian Quinones scored the opening goal of the tournament and veteran striker Raul Jimenez added a second as the co-hosts’ bid for qualification from Group A got off to smooth start. The match saw a total of three cards too; South Africa received two, finishing with only nine men after Sphephelo Sithole and Themba Zwane were sent off, while Mexico’s Cesar Montes also saw red in stoppage time. For the first time in FIFA World Cup history, three red cards were shown in the opening match of a World Cup.
The Mexican-colored red, green and white smoke from pre-game fireworks had barely dissipated before Quinones fired the hosts into the lead on nine minutes, drilling a low shot through the legs of South Africa’s goalkeeper and captain Ronwen Williams.
A deafening roar cascaded down from the stands of the Azteca, the footballing cathedral that became the only stadium to host games at three different World Cups.
South Africa coach Hugo Broos had warned his players to be ready for the intimidating atmosphere created by a capacity 80,824 crowd at the imposing concrete arena.
But South Africa’s players looked to have a bad case of stage fright as Mexico’s fans greeted each completed pass with a raucous chorus of “Ole!” in the opening minutes.
Sithole seemed particularly affected, being caught in possession trying to play out of the back for Quinones’ opening goal.
Sithole’s miserable afternoon ended with a 49th minute dismissal after bundling over Mexico’s Brian Gutierrez when clean through on goal.
Mexico rammed home their advantage in the 67th minute, with a fine counter attack culminating in Roberto Alvarado crossing for Wolverhampton Wanderers forward Jimenez to nod home at the far post.
It got worse for South Africa in the 84th minute when Zwane was dismissed after a VAR review for flinging an arm into the face of Alvarado.
There was still time for late drama when Mexican defender Cesar Montes was shown a red card for a clumsy challenge on Khulisa Mudau on the edge of the penalty area.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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Sports
Phil Mickelson accused of inappropriate contact with club employee
Phil Mickelson has been accused of “inappropriate contact” with a female golf-club employee, according to a report from Golf Digest.
The publication reported Thursday that Mickelson’s membership from The Farms Golf Club in San Diego was revoked after a female staffer accused him of “nonconsensual and inappropriate physical contact” with her earlier this year. According to the report, which cites multiple sources with knowledge of the matter, Mickelson approached and made contact with the employee before he set out for a round of golf. The report says the employee rejected Mickelson’s advances and reported the incident to management.
According to Golf Digest‘s sources, the club immediately reviewed the incident and confronted Mickelson mid-round with the allegations. Mickelson was then asked to leave the property, which he did before the end of his round.
Mickelson, who is currently on leave from pro golf for a personal matter, declined to comment directly to Golf Digest, but a Mickelson spokesperson offered a brief statement about the alleged incident:
“Any misunderstanding has been cleared up. Phil continues to attend to a family health matter and is uncertain when he will be able to return to professional golf.”
Mickelson’s manager did not immediately respond to a text from GOLF.com seeking further comment.
In a statement to Golf Digest, The Farms confirmed that a member had been removed following an incident involving an employee but did not say whether the member was Mickelson. The statement read:
“The Farms Golf Club is committed to maintaining a golf club environment that is safe, respectful and reflects the highest standards of conduct. All members are required to adhere to our Code of Conduct, and any allegations of misconduct are taken seriously. Following a staff member report of member misconduct, the Club provided immediate and ongoing support to the staff member, conducted a thorough independent investigation of the incident and took decisive action. This individual is no longer a member of The Farms Golf Club.”
Mickelson missed the start of the LIV Golf season to tend to his personal issue. He returned for LIV’s South Africa event in March before announcing that he would be out for an extended period of time as he navigates a “family health matter.”
Mickelson, who is 55, sat out both the Masters and the PGA Championship this year. It was only the second time that Mickelson did not tee it up at Augusta National since 1995. Mickelson also missed the 2022 Masters after he made controversial comments about LIV Golf’s Saudi financiers.
Sports
Roy Jones Jr picks a winner in Canelo’s comeback against Mbilli: “He’s better than people think”
Canelo Alvarez will make his ring return in September as he attempts to regain the WBC super-middleweight world title against Christian Mbilli, and boxing icon Roy Jones Jr has explained what he believes will prove to be pivotal in the outcome of the fight.
Alvarez suffered an injury when he lost his undisputed throne to Terence Crawford back in September and was left sidelined when all four titles were reassigned, due to Crawford’s retirement and subsequent relinquishment.
However, following a successful elbow surgery, Alvarez will jump back into an immediate title shot against Mbilli, who was elevated to full WBC world champion after defending the interim belt against Lester Martinez on the Canelo-Crawford undercard.
Whilst Canelo is undeniably a legend of the super-middleweight scene, the 35-year-old has shown signs of fading in recent outings, leaving fans questioning whether he still has what it takes to re-establish himself as the best 168lber on the planet.
Speaking with Boxing News, Jones Jr said that the bout against Mbilli will come down to how much hunger the Mexican has left, declaring that Canelo, at his optimum, will be too much for the best version of the new champion.
“That is a good fight to look at. I like Mbilli, but Canelo is still better than what people give him credit for, so I ain’t going to say that Mbilli is going to beat him.
“I know that Mbilli is a good fighter, but I haven’t seen Mbilli really prove himself [at the elite level] yet. I have seen what Canelo can do, so a hungry Canelo will beat Mbilli, but if he ain’t hungry, then Mbilli is gonna beat him.
“If he is hungry enough, he will win the fight, it all depends on what Canelo’s hunger level is.
Alvarez vs. Mbill takes place on Saturday, September 12, topping a ‘Mexico vs. The World’ bill which takes place in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Sports
Three red cards in the World Cup’s opening game – why were the players sent off?
South Africa’s campaign at the World Cup 2026 got off to the worst possible start as they were beaten by co-hosts Mexico and ended the match with nine men following two straight red cards.
Both came in the second half with Bafana Bafana already losing 1-0 thanks to Julian Quinones’ goal in the eight minute of the game. Sphephelo ‘Yaya’ Sithole was the first player to be dismissed after catching Brian Gutierrez on the edge of the South African penalty area and denying a goal scoring opportunity.
That decision was a clear one but the second red card, which came in the 84th minute, was more controversial.
As Mexico looked to work their way into the box from the left wing, South Africa’s Themba Zwane got into a grappling contest with Roberto Alvarado. Zwane came round the back of the Mexican and forced his left arm into the face of Alvarado who went to ground clutching his head.
Referee Wilton Sampaio was called over to the pitchside monitor by the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) and asked to look at replays of the incident.
He saw a slap from Zwane, which became clearer from the referee’s body cam footage later, and decided that the South African deserved a red card for violent conduct.
This was the first time a team had received two red cards in a World Cup match since Portugal and Netherlands both had two players dismissed against each other in the 2006 round of 16.
“I think the decision is extremely harsh,” claimed Ally McCoist on ITV’s coverage of the game with the commentator describing Zwane’s movement as natural from the position he was in.
In the US coverage of the game, former USMNT star Landon Donovan had a similar outlook and said: “That’s a harsh red card, I can’t see that being a red card.”
However, that wasn’t the final moment of controversy as Mexico found themselves reduced to 10-men in the dying stages of the match.
Left-back Cesar Montes cynically stopped a darting run from Khuliso Mudau as he attempted to drive into the penalty area from the right. Montes stuck out a leg and brough Mudau to ground and was amazed as the referee pulled out a third straight red card of the game.
ITV’s American rules analyst and VAR expert, Christina Unkel, explained that there wasn’t clear evidence for VAR to decide that the referee had made a mistake and, as such, Montes was dismissed for denying a goalscoring opportunity.
This was the seventh time there have been three or more red cards in a World Cup game and the first time in an opener.
All three players, Sithole, Zwane and Montes will now miss their nation’s next match but Fifa holds the right to extend the ban or add any other sanctions to the ban if they deem necessary.
That means that Sithole and Zwane will miss the next match against Czechia on June 18 and Montes will be unavailable for Mexico’s game against South Korea on June 19.
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