Yellow cards have been on a sharp increase in recent tournaments, with almost 100 more cards awarded at World Cup 2006 compared to 1998, despite the same number of games.
Referees are often asked to clamp down on certain things prior to a World Cup, but they may have now been asked to be more leniant, and just three reds awarded at Euro 08, and then 17 red cards at the World Cup 2010, it appears that the powers are wanting less sendings off these days.
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| Year | Yellow Cards | Red Cards |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 260 | 17 |
| 2006 | 345 | 28 |
| 2002 | 260 | 11 |
| 1998 | 250 | 22 |
| 1994 | 221 | 8 |
| 1990 | 162 | 15 |
*Note there were 12 more matches played from 1998 onwards
The record of red cards seems quite erratic, yellow cards is much more consistent and they allow us to compare discipline and the strictness of referees from tournament to tournament.
It seems that referees have been encouraged to take a more cautious approach these days it may be best to bet with a degree a caution on World Cup Red Cards. The upward trend on yellows also seems to have stopped as referees prefer to calm situations down rather than waive cards around.
It would be a surprise if there are more than twenty red cards at World Cup 2014. That narrows it down somewhat but still leaves a fairly large choice of possible outcomes. In World Cup 2010 there were just seventeen sendings off which proves that referees are now taking more of a common sense approach to discipline and this suggests that World Cup Red Cards are likely to be lower again in 2014 rather than higher.
It is interesting that three of the lowest make ups of red cards in the last six World Cups have been in the tournaments that were held outside of Europe. In USA 94 there were just eight red cards and in Japan and South Korea 2002 there were eleven. Then in 2010 in South Africa there were seventeen, which wasn't low but it wasn't particularly high either. With the 2014 World Cup being held in South America the red cards could be quite low.
So what do we back? It looks as though the number of red cards is likely to be much lower than the 28 we saw at World Cup 2006 and probably lower, or around the same number, as the 17 we saw in 2010.
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