A World Cup legal dispute flared Thursday with Chile challenging Ecuador’s place at the finals tournament over an alleged ineligible player. (More Football News)
The Chilean soccer federation asked FIFA to investigate its cl♛aim that Ecuador player Byron Castillo i🌜s actually Colombian and not entitled to have played in qualifying games.
The complaint comes more than one month after South American qualifying ended and Ecuador was dra🦂wn into a group with host nation Qatar, the Netherlands and Senegal.
“FIFA can confirm that it has received a formal complaint ༒from the Chilean FA in relation to this matter,” soccerꦰ’s governing body said in a statement.
FIFA gave no timetable for a possible discip🎶linary case ahead of the World Cup 🔜kicking off Nov. 21.
Ecuador placed fourth in the 10-nation South American qualifying group to advance directly to Qatar. Fifth-place Peru has a playoff game next month agaꦕinst Australia or the United Arab Emirates.
Chile placed seventh, seven points behind Ecuador, ꦏbut argues it could advance if games involving Castillo were forfeited.
The FIFA rules in cases of ineligible players require results to beܫ overturned as a 3-0 loss.
Chile has n🦹ow filed complaints against an opponent’s player in back-to-back World Cup qualifying prog🦩rams.
In South American qualifyinಞg for the 2018 World Cup, Bolivia forfeited two games in which it fielded an ineligible player as a late sub✅stitute. FIFA had received complaints from Chile and Peru about Bolivia defender Nelson Cabrera, who was born in Paraguay and had previously played for Paraguay’s national team.
Bolivia lost an appeal at the Court of Arbitration for Sport which said FIFA was right to🐻 investigate even when protests were filed weeks after the games were played. That case ultimately harmed 🧸Chile. Three extra points awarded to Peru lifted it above Chile to enter an intercontinental playoff that it won.
FIFA wrote stricter rules for the 2022 World Cup requiring all players in qualifying games to produce a “valid permanent international passport” for inspection𒐪 by match officials.