Notes
  The
  records do not show any England player receiving a booking in World Cup finals play before the 1966
  tournament.  In the nine final tournaments England reached between 1966
  and 2010, 36 players were subjected to disciplinary measures.  Six of
  these were disciplined at two tournaments, Terry Butcher and Ray Wilkins at
  the 1982 and 1986 tournaments, Sol Campbell and Paul Scholes at the 1998 and 
  2002 tournaments and Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher at the 2006 and 2010 
  tournaments.
   Three
  players received a red card expulsion, Ray Wilkins for a second cautionable
  offence in the group match against Morocco at the 1986 tournament in Mexico, 
  David Beckham for violent conduct in the round of 16 teams match against 
  Argentina at the 1998 tournament in France and Wayne Rooney for violent 
  conduct in the quarter-finals match against Portugal at the 2006 tournament in 
  Germany.
  Disciplinary
  records in World Cup finals play before the 1970 tournament in Mexico may not
  be entirely reliable.  Not until the 1970 tournament was the highly
  visible method of denoting cautions and expulsions by displaying yellow and
  red cards established.  Before then, expulsions were discernible because
  a player left the pitch, but cautions were merely noted in the referee's
  notebook and were not always publicly known.  
  It was uncertainty about the
  bookings given the Charlton brothers, Bobby and Jackie, in the quarterfinal
  match against Argentina at Wembley Stadium in 1966 that led the late English
  referee Ken Aston to develop the red and yellow cards system.  Jackie had
  been involved in a pushing and shoving affair with Argentine players and brother
  Bobby sought to intervene, apparently as a peacemaker.  Contemporaneous
  newspaper accounts reported that both had been booked, but the West German
  referee had not given any public indication that this was the case.  Manager Alf Ramsey
  had to ask FIFA for clarification, and FIFA confirmed the bookings.  The confusion set Aston to thinking about the problem,
  and while noticing a traffic light changing colours, he came up with the idea
  of displaying yellow and red cards to make cautions as well as expulsions
  plain to all.
  To this day, 
  the
  official match summary appearing on the FIFA website contains no mention that the 
  Charlton's
  were booked, although it does list the caution and expulsion of Argentine
  captain Antonio Rattin.  When England met Argentina
  at the 1998 final tournament, FIFA revealed that an examination of its
  records, conducted the year previously at Bobby Charlton's request, showed
  that both Charlton's had been cautioned in the 1966 match, Jackie apparently for his
  involvement in the goalmouth pushing and Bobby for dissent.  The caution
  was the only one 
  Bobby Charlton
  received in his 106-match England career.  The entire episode serves as a
  warning that records of player discipline prior to the advent of yellow and
  red cards may not be complete.
  Four England players have served
  suspensions from World Cup finals play.   
  The
  first was midfielder Ray Wilkins, who drew a two-match suspension after he was
  shown the red card for a second cautionable offence in England's goalless draw
  with Morocco at the 1986 tournament in Mexico.   
  Wilkins,
  who had already drawn a caution for a tussle with a Moroccan player, had taken
  over the captain's armband when injury forced Bryan Robson to leave the
  match.  Minutes later, when he was ruled offside, he tossed the ball at
  the ground in disgust at the failure to call a foul and it hit the referee on
  the bounce.  FIFA increased the usual one-match suspension
  for a red card to two
        matches because it deemed the offence which led to Wilkins' second
        caution to involve abuse of the
        referee.  Wilkins missed the next two matches against Poland and
  Paraguay through suspension, and manager Bobby Robson did not call on him for
  England's last match of the tournament against Argentina, although he was one
  of the five substitutes on the bench.  Wilkins,
  elevated to England captain one moment, thus ended his World Cup career in
  disgrace the next, the first England player ever sent off in World Cup finals
  play and only the fourth sent off in any match.
  In
  the same tournament, central defender Terry Fenwick drew cautions for fouls in
  England's first and third matches in group play, against Portugal and Poland,
  and was suspended for the next match against Paraguay in the round of 16
  teams.  Fenwick returned against Argentina and drew yet another yellow
  card for a foul.  That that was England's last match of the tournament
  probably saved Fenwick from further distinguishing himself.
  Paul
  Gascoigne earned a one-match suspension in the 1990 tournament in Italy after
  drawing cautions against Belgium in the round of 16 teams and against West
  Germany in the semi-final.  After the second yellow card, Gascoigne, in an
   unforgettably poignant
      scene televised around the world, shed tears as it dawned on him he
      would not play in the final match were England to win the semi-final.  As it turned out, the suspension forced him to miss the
      third-place match against host Italy instead.
  Jamie Carragher served a one-match suspension after 
  picking up a caution each in the opening 2010 Finals tournament in South 
  Africa against United States and Algeria.
  Three
  England players were saved from serving suspensions from World Cup finals play
  because the offences warranting the suspension came in England's last match of
  the tournament.  Francis Lee drew a caution against Brazil in group play
  and a second against West Germany in the quarterfinals at the 1970 tournament
  in Mexico and would have been suspended from the semi-final, but West
  Germany's 3-2 extra-time victory sent England home.  David Beckham's red
  card early in the second half against Argentina at the 1998 tournament in
  France would have earned him a suspension from the quarterfinal, but Argentina
  eliminated England on penalty kicks after an extra-time 2-2 draw. 
  
  Wayne Rooney's red card against Portugal would have 
  suspended him from any potential semi-final England may have had in 2006.
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  PY/CG