England defender Jarell Quansah has been given a two-match ban for his red card against Mexico.
Quansah was sent off in the 54th minute of the 3-2 win following a high challenge on Jesus Gallardo.
It was classed as serious foul play, meaning the Bayer Leverkusen player was handed an extra match on top of the automatic one-game suspension by Fifa’s disciplinary committee.
Former Liverpool man Quansah will miss Saturday’s quarter-final with Norway (22:00 BST) and a potential semi-final against Argentina or Switzerland.
Quansah, 23, will be available if England reach the final in New Jersey on 19 July.
The Football Association (FA) was considering whether to appeal, but under the tournament regulations there is no avenue to contest the ban.
However, BBC Sport has been told the FA made very strong representations to Fifa over the process that reached the Quansah red card decision, arguing that the referee was shown a still image of the tackle and slow-motion replays before being shown the incident in real-time on the pitchside screen, and that this could have resulted in ‘outcome bias’.
In the Premier League, officials are always shown incidents at full speed first – though England’s top flight is an outlier.
The ban complicates matters for head coach Thomas Tuchel at right-back.
Quansah filled in against Mexico while England were without the injured Reece James, with Djed Spence only used as a substitute after a minor fitness issue.
However, Tuchel has said he expects James to be available against Norway after missing games because of the hamstring injury he sustained in the second group match against Ghana.
Tuchel’s assistant coach Anthony Barry said the Quansah news was “disappointing”.
“Disappointing, not with the decision, just the fact that we lose a good player,” he added.
“He was excellent in training, and of course we have some injuries in that position, so it looked like a space had opened up for Jarell.
“But the decision’s been made, we won’t waste any more energy on it. Overall for us, we lose a good player for two games, but it’s just another hurdle that we have to overcome.”
Winger Bukayo Saka said the ban was “incredibly frustrating for us, and for him”.
“But it is what it is. We have to adapt and pick a team to win against Norway,” he added.
Fifa has announced that French referee Clement Turpin, who took charge of England’s 4-2 win over Croatia, has been appointed to officiate the Norway game.
