Premier League confirm stance on latest Everton VAR chaos and
Connect with us

Everton

Premier League confirm stance on latest Everton VAR chaos and Michael Oliver decision

Published

on

Kai Havertz’s late goal was controversially allowed to stand against Everton despite a VAR check

In controversial circumstances, referee Michael Oliver overruled VAR to allow Arsenal’s late winner against Everton.

Minutes before the end of a hard-fought match in north London, Kai Havertz prodded his team into the lead, but the opposition questioned whether the goal should stand after it struck Gabriel Jesus’ arm during the build-up.
Oliver was called to the pitchside monitor to reconsider his decision to let play continue, but he chose not to overturn the initial call—a rare decision since the Premier League adopted VAR.

Reporter Notebook: Everton and its fans have shown they're not for moving -  but new owners have huge job on their hands | Football News | Sky Sports
Sean Dyche, who has frequently lamented the certainty of decisions being altered once the on-field official is sent to the screen, was aware of that. The Blues manager commented, “Funny how it is in a title race and it goes the other way,” in reference to Oliver breaking the pattern at the Emirates.

As stoppage time drew near, Ashley Young’s misplaced ball was intercepted by Jesus’ arm, drawing Everton level at 1. The striker for Arsenal broke and found Martin Odegaard, whose shot Jordan Pickford parried, but it fell into Havertz’s path, who finished from a distance.

See also  Everton regular shares if he intends to stay after face-to-face Dyche talks

QUIZ: Everton's 22/23 Season So Far
Pickford and his teammates protested the goal, and it appeared that VAR would reverse the decision when it came in. Although Oliver was satisfied with his initial call, the ECHO understands that he was called to the monitor to assess whether Jesus had purposefully handled. Conversely, Dyche was left on the touchline, laughing in shock.
“We are all worried about handball, we are not quite sure where it lives,” he said when asked about his thoughts on the decision made following the game. That seems like a pretty obvious one to me; they approach the monitor and, ironically, it turns around during a title race. Ultimately, we are all concerned about handball because we don’t know where it originates. That seems like a hard one to argue against. They score when he runs through the handball that is directly in his path. I have to have that one given to me.

 

 

Trending

Discover more from Faxsoccer

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading