Santa Fe New Mexican

FIFA bans Messi for four World Cup qualifying games.

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GENEVA — Lionel Messi is banned from Argentina’s next four World Cup qualifying games, dealing a blow to a campaign by the 2014 runner-up that has stuttered without him.

Messi’s suspension for “having directed insulting words at an assistant referee” during a home qualifier last week against Chile started on Tuesday, shortly before his teammates played Bolivia in La Paz. Without Messi, Argentina went on to lose the qualifier 2-0. The five-time FIFA player of the year can appeal to FIFA, but is on track to return for Argentina’s final match in the 10-team South American qualifying group, hosting Ecuador on Oct. 10.

“We have to appeal this decision, we’ll see how it goes,” said Jorge Miadosqui, Argentina’s national teams director. “But we’re left angry and sad because [Messi] will not be with the team.”

Argentina has relied on its captain Messi to move up to third place in a group where the top four qualify for the tournament in Russia. The fifth-place team will enters a playoff in November, likely against New Zealand.

It was close to a must-win match last Thursday when Argentina hosted Chile, the team it lost to in the Copa America finals of 2015 and 2016

Argentina won 1-0 after Messi scored with a first-half penalty at the vibrant Monumental Stadium in Buenos Aires, but he lost his cool in the closing minutes.

Messi reacted angrily when a decision went against him and aimed a volley of profane abuse at the assistant. He refused to shake hands with the official after the match.

FIFA could intervene as the incident was not initially reported by the Brazilian referee. It was judged a red-card offense for Messi.

“This decision is in line with the FIFA Disciplina­ry Committee’s previous rulings in similar cases,” said the world soccer body, which also fined Messi $10,160.

Messi and the Argentine soccer federation can challenge the ban at FIFA’s appeals committee. It rarely overturns disciplina­ry rulings, though it could reduce the number of games he must miss.

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 ?? VICTOR R. CAIVANO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Argentina’s Lionel Messi argues with assistant referee Emerson Augusto de Carvalho during a World Cup qualifying match March 23 against Chile in Buenos Aires. Messi has been banned from Argentina’s next four World Cup qualifiers, starting with...
VICTOR R. CAIVANO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Argentina’s Lionel Messi argues with assistant referee Emerson Augusto de Carvalho during a World Cup qualifying match March 23 against Chile in Buenos Aires. Messi has been banned from Argentina’s next four World Cup qualifiers, starting with...

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