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Yellow and red cards at World Cup

Other News Materials 19 June 2010 12:21 (UTC +04:00)
List of yellow and red cards issued at the 2010 World Cup by the end of Friday, June 18 (23 of 64 games):
Yellow and red cards at World Cup

(DPA) - List of yellow and red cards issued at the 2010 World Cup by the end of Friday, June 18 (23 of 64 games):     Red cards (3)

   Australia (1):    Tim Cahill

   Nigeria (1)    Sani Kaita

   South Africa (1):    Itumeleng Khune

   Yellow-red cards (4):

   Algeria (1):    Abdelkader Ghezzal

   Germany (1):    Miroslav Klose

   Serbia (1):    Aleksandar Lukovic

   Uruguay (1):    Nicolas Lodeiro

   Yellow cards (82):

   Mexico (6):    Efraín Juarez, Gerardo Torrado, Hector Moreno, Efrain Juarez,    Guillermo Franco, Francisco Rodriguez

   Serbia (6):    Aleksandar Kolarov, Branislav Ivanovic, Nemanja Vidic, Neven    Subotic, Nikola Zigic, Zdravko Kuzmanovic

   Slovenia (6):    Aleksander Radoslavljevic, Andrej Komac, Andraz Kirm, Bojan Jokic,    Bostjan Cesar, Marko Suler

   Germany (5):    Cacau, Mesut Oezil, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Philipp Lahm, Sami    Khedira

   France (5):    Franck Ribery, Jaremy Toulalan (2), Patrice Evra, Eric Abidal

   Argentina (4):    Jonas Gutierrez (2), Gabriel Heinze, Javier Mascherano

   England (4):    James Milner, Jamie Carragher (2), Steven Gerrard

   Greece (4):    Vasilios Torosidis, Alexandros Tziolis, Georgios Samaras, Sokratis    Papastathopoulos,

   Switzerland (4):    Diego Benaglio, Hakan Yakin, Reto Ziegler, Stephane Grichting

   South Africa (4):    Kagisho Dikgacoi (2), Peter Masilela, Steven Pienaar

   US (4):    Jay DeMerit, Robbie Findley (2), Steven Cherundolo

   Australia (3):    Carl Valeri, Craig Moore, Lucas Neill

   Algeria (2):    Hassan Yebda, Mehdi Lacen

   Chile (2):    Carlos Carmona, Matias Fernandez

   Ivory Coast (2):    Didier Zokora, Guy Demel

   Ghana (2):    Isaac Vorsah, Prince Tagoe

   Netherlands (2):    Nigel de Jong, Robin van Persie

   New Zealand (2):    Tony Lochhead, Winston Reid

   Nigeria (2):    Lukman Haruna, Chinedu Obasi

   South Korea (2):    Lee Chung Yong, Ki Hun Yeom

   Uruguay (2):    Diego Lugano, Mauricio Victorino

   Brazil (1):    Ramires

   Cameroon (1):    Nicolas Nkoulou

   Denmark (1):    Simon Kjaer

   Honduras (1):    Wilson Palacios

   Italy (1):    Mauro Camoranesi

   Japan (1):    Yuki Abe

   Paraguay (1):    Victor Caceres

   Portugal (1):    Cristiano Ronaldo

   Slovakia (1):    Zdeno Strba

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