Not only did Virgil van Dijk appear to kick out twice at Kai Havertz early on in a small provocation between the two players, but lengthy VAR checks were on hand yet again. Gabriel Martinelli felt he was fouled in the first half when sandwiched between Ibrahima Konate and Trent Alexander-Arnold.
The Premier League's Match Centre (an official X - formerly Twitter - account), wrote: "The referee’s call of no penalty for the challenge by Konate on Martinelli was checked and confirmed by VAR - deeming that Konate won the ball." The score was 1-1 at the time with Arsenal players left unhappy with Taylor and Stockley Park officials not giving them a penalty.
By half-time, the anger had turned to joy. Merino headed in from Declan Rice's inch-perfect cross. It took a while for that goal to be confirmed, though, with an offside review taking place.
"The referee’s call of goal was checked and confirmed by the VAR as there were no attackers in an offside position," the Match Centre explained. Gary Neville, on commentary, wasn't impressed with the speed of Michael Salisbury and Darren Cann on VAR and assistant VAR duties..
That was far from the end of the referee discourse. With just seconds of normal time to go, Taylor made no friends in the Arsenal squad or fanbase as he blew early during a move that would end with Gabriel Jesus tapping in for what would have been a late winner.
The Brazilian looked surprised to see Taylor had already ended play, with Kai Havertz also left bemused after his effort had hit the post. Havertz initially jumped alongside Liverpool defender Ibrahima Konate as the ball came off his arm, but football.london understands it was Jakub Kiwior's challenge on Dominik Szoboszlai that Taylor deemed to have been illegal.
Kiwior leapt over and into Szoboszlai, winning the ball in the air, ending up on the floor after a dominating header. Despite Szboszlai not jumping or competing for the ball, Taylor ruled that he had been fouled, meaning Havertz's handball, the shot, and Jesus' subsequent finish were all irrelevant.
Because Taylor stopped play, VAR was unable to have any say in the matter. Arteta explained afterwards that he had not been told why the foul was given. "I’m sure we’ll get a letter afterwards but I don’t know," he said.
Former Premier League referee Mike Dean explained: "It's more of a soft foul if anything, to be fair he's just penalised the Arsenal player. It's probably a 50-50 call, for me. He's had a good game the referee, so I can't criticise him for that to be honest with you."
0 Comments