The 1982 Falklands War between Argentina and the United Kingdom concluded over four decades ago, but its shadow still reaches into the referee assignment sheets at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
English officials Michael Oliver and Anthony Taylor have been officially barred from officiating any Argentina matches during the tournament. The restriction was formally acknowledged on July 8, 2026, during the knockout stages, and it applies regardless of Argentina’s path through the bracket.
Why two of England’s best referees can’t blow the whistle on Argentina
FIFA operates under a political neutrality framework when assigning referees to matches. The basic rule is straightforward: officials cannot referee matches involving their own national team. Because Argentina and the United Kingdom are considered politically adversarial in this specific historical context, English referees are also barred from officiating Argentina fixtures, full stop.
In plain terms: Oliver and Taylor can referee anyone, except Argentina, and except England.
Both England and Argentina are on the same side of the bracket in 2026, meaning a potential collision in the knockout rounds is a real possibility. Oliver has still been handed significant assignments. He is confirmed to referee the quarter-final between Spain and Belgium. His exclusion from Argentina matches does not reflect any performance concerns.
This isn’t the first time Taylor has felt the effects of this rule
A similar restriction affected Anthony Taylor’s potential involvement during the 2022 World Cup final, which ultimately featured Argentina. Taylor was on the sidelines of that conversation specifically because of the same Falklands-era policy now back in the spotlight.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

3 hours ago
7








English (US) ·