By DPA,
Johannesburg : List of yellow and red cards issued at the 2010 World Cup by the end of Monday (54 of 64 games):
Red cards (6)
Australia (2):
Tim Cahill
Harry Kewell
France (1):
Yoann Gourcuff
Nigeria (1)
Sani Kaita
South Africa (1):
Itumeleng Khune
Switzerland (1):
Valon Behrami
Yellow-red cards (7):
Algeria (2):
Abdelkader Ghezzal, Antar Yahia
Brazil (1):
Kaka
Chile (1):
Marco Estrada
Germany (1):
Miroslav Klose
Serbia (1):
Aleksandar Lukovic
Uruguay (1):
Nicolas Lodeiro
Yellow cards (197):
Slovakia (11):
Jan Durica, Jan Mucha, Peter Pekarik, Robert Vittek,
Stanislav Sestak, Vladimir Weiss, Zdeno Strba (2), Juraj
Kucka, Kamil Kopunek, Martin Skrtel
Chile (10):
Carlos Carmona (2), Matias Fernandez (2), Gary Medel(2),
Waldo Ponce (2), Humberto Suazo, Jorge Valdivia, Ismael
Fuentes, Arturo Vidal, Rodrigo Millar
Mexico (9):
Efrain Juarez (2), Francisco Rodriguez, Gerardo Torrado, Guillermo
Franco, Hector Moreno, Israel Castro, Javier Hernandez, Rafael
Marquez
Slovenia (9):
Aleksander Radoslavljevic, Andrej Komac, Andraz Kirm, Bojan Jokic
(2), Bostjan Cesar, Marko Suler, Valter Birsa, Zlatko Dedic
US (9):
Carlos Bocanegra, DaMarcus Beasley, Jay DeMerit, Jozy Altidore,
Ricardo Clark, Robbie Findley (2), Steven Cherundolo (2)
Ghana (8):
Andre Ayew (2), Anthony Annan, Isaac Vorsah, Jonathan Mensah (2),
Lee Addy, Prince Tagoe
Serbia (8):
Aleksandar Kolarov, Branislav Ivanovic, Nemanja Vidic, Neven
Subotic, Nikola Zigic, Zdravko Kuzmanovic, Aleksandar Lukovic,
Milos Ninkovic
Netherlands (8):
Nigel de Jong, Robin van Persie, Gregory van der Wiel
Dirk Kuyt, Giovanni van Bronckhorst, Rafael van der Vaart, Arjen
Robben, Maarten Stekelenburg
Switzerland (8):
Diego Benaglio, Hakan Yakin, Reto Ziegler, Stephane Grichting,
Tranquillo Barnetta, Gokhan Inler, Blaise Nkufo, Gelson
Fernandez
Australia (7):
Carl Valeri, Craig Moore (2), Lucas Neill, Brett Emerton, Luke
Wilkshire, Michael Beauchamp
Germany (7):
Arne Friedrich, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Cacau, Mesut Oezil,
Philipp Lahm, Sami Khedira, Thomas Mueller
Honduras (7):
Wilson Palacios (2), Emilio Izaguirre, Danilo Turcios, Osman
Chavez, David Suazo, Hendry Thomas
Portugal (7):
Hugo Almeida, Pedro Mendes, Cristiano Ronaldo, Fabio Coentrao,
Duda, Pepe, Tiago
Brazil (6):
Ramires (2), Felipe Melo, Juan, Luis Fabiano, Kaka
Denmark (6):
Simon Kjaer (2), Thomas Sorensen, Christian Poulsen, Nicklas
Bendtner, Per Krøldrup
England (6):
James Milner, Jamie Carragher (2), Steven Gerrard,
Glen Johnson (2)
France (6):
Abou Diaby, Franck Ribery, Jaremy Toulalan (2), Patrice Evra, Eric
Abidal
New Zealand (6):
Tony Lochhead, Winston Reid, Rory Fallon, Ryan Nelsen (2), Tommy
Smith
South Korea (6):
Lee Chung Yong, Ki Hun Yeom, Kim Nam Il, Cha Du Ri, Cho Yong
Hyung, Lee Chung Yong
Argentina (5):
Jonas Gutierrez (2), Gabriel Heinze, Javier Mascherano, Mario
Bolatti
Cameroon (5):
Nicolas Nkoulou (2), Stephane Mbia (2), Sebastien Bassong
Greece (5):
Vasilios Torosidis, Alexandros Tziolis, Georgios Samaras, Sokratis
Papastathopoulos, Konstantinos Katsouranis
Italy (5):
Fabio Cannavaro, Giorgio Chiellini, Mauro Camoranesi, Simone Pepe,
Fabio Quagliarella
Ivory Coast (5):
Didier Zokora, Guy Demel, Kader Keita, Ismael Tiote, Siaka Tiene
Nigeria (5):
Atanda Ayila Yussuf, Chinedu Obasi (2), Lukman Haruna, Vincent
Enyeama
Algeria (4):
Hassan Yebda (2), Mehdi Lacen (2)
Paraguay (4):
Victor Caceres (2), Enrique Vera, Roque Santa Cruz
South Africa (4):
Kagisho Dikgacoi (2), Peter Masilela, Steven Pienaar
Japan (3):
Yasuhito Endo, Yuki Abe, Yuto Nagatomo
Uruguay (3):
Diego Lugano, Mauricio Victorino,Jorge Fucile
North Korea (2):
Hong Yong Jo, Pak Chol Jin