Pep Guardiola Unleashes Incredible VAR Tirade on Five Incidents Across Eight Months
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola unleashed his long-held frustrations with VAR after they reached a peak in Tuesdayâs Carabao Cup semifinal victory over Newcastle United.
The Catalan coach saw his new signing Antoine Semenyo denied a second goal at St Jamesâ Park after a four-minute VAR review discovered Erling Haaland to be in a fractionally offside position and interfering with play. The January recruit, who had opened the scoring 10 minutes earlier, agreed with his manager: âThe second goal should have stood.â
Rayan Cherki would belatedly establish a 2â0 lead for the visitors to take into the second leg of the tie at the Etihad Stadium next month, giving Guardiola the platform of victory to voice his boiling fury.
âWe know how it works and that will make us stronger,â the City boss seethed to Sky Sports. âIâve said it many times to the team, it is always about that. Itâs in that situation how we react and how we compete.â
Intriguingly, Guardiolaâs six-minute rantâeven longer than any VAR reviewâdid not dwell solely on Semenyoâs goal. No, these feelings of perceived injustice stretch all the way back to last seasonâs FA Cup final.
Semenyo extricated himself from a crowd of players at a second-half corner for City on Tuesday night, ingeniously contorting his body to flick a heel at the ball which sailed into the net. The goal was given by the on-pitch officials, but VAR Stuart Attwell eventually determined that Haaland had narrowly strayed offside. It was a marginal distance, but not one uncommon in the age of semi-automated technology.
The decision to disallow the goal had to go through referee Chris Kavanagh as Haaland hadnât touched the ball. However, a pitch-side review of the incident led the official to judge that Cityâs striker had been actively interfering in play by preventing Malick Thiaw from clearing Semenyoâs acrobatic effort off the line.
âFour officials and VAR were not able to take the decision, they had to go to the referee,â Guardiola fumed, later adding with more than a hint of sarcasm: âToday, the line was perfect. Millimetres.â
This VAR intervention prompted Guardiola to feverishly reminisce about Cityâs previous trip to Tyneside this season. In the words of the raging coach, the visitors had âtwo insane penaltiesâ overlooked by the referees while the game was still goalless. Newcastle would go on to claim a 2â1 win.
âIn the league game here, 60 minutes and 20 minutes, take a look,â Guardiola pointed out, entirely unprompted. âI donât understand why in the Premier League game with [Fabian] Schär on Phil [Foden] why VAR didnât say anything. Then the penalty with [Jérémy] Doku and Thiaw.â
Schär caught Foden with a late lunge in the first half of Cityâs previous clash with Newcastle back in November. The England international had already gotten his shot away, which may very well have prompted the officials to look leniently upon the hefty contact dolled out by the Magpies centre back. BBC Sport have subsequently reported that an independent panel of official VAR judges deemed this to be one of 13 errors across the first half of the Premier League season.
The second offence flagged by Guardiola didnât fall into that same category, with the panel accepting the decision to overlook the appeals for handball when Thiaw blocked Dokuâs close-range shot with his arm.
âLook back at my press conference. I didnât say anything after that game. But here, VAR intervenes but not for two unbelievable penalties,â Guardiola moaned. âI said it today because we won. Tell me if I said anything after the game we lost. In 10 years here, I know what happens.â
Guardiola was asked what was behind these supposed failings. âAsk them,â he shrugged. âWho is the boss of the referees? Ask him [Howard Webb]. Itâs the semifinals. We play for a lot to reach the finals. It will make us stronger.
âDid you review the FA Cup final last season?â Guardiola continued, the talk of showpiece fixtures drawing a connection in his mind palace of VAR mistakes. âWhen [Dean] Henderson touched the ball outside the box. Did I say anything?â
The City boss was referring to the hotly controversial decision to overlook an incident in last Mayâs FA Cup final which saw the Crystal Palace goalkeeper appear to claw the ball away from Haaland while outside his penalty area.
The on-pitch officials mistakenly thought that Henderson was within the confines of his box. VAR Jarred Gillett saw that he wasnât but deemed that the ball was going away from goal, thereby dictating that Haaland had not been denied a clear goalscoring opportunity, sparing Henderson a red card. ITV pundit Ian Wright ignored his allegiances to Palace when describing the decision as âabsolutely pathetic.â
Henderson remained on the pitch to save Omar Marmoushâs first-half penalty and oversee a famous 1â0 win. Guardiola did not take issue with the incident in his press conferenceââItâs not my businessâ was all he would offerâbut he could be seen remonstrating with the goalkeeper on the Wembley pitch after the final whistle.
âThe big clubs overcome these situations,â Guardiola concluded from within the bowels of St Jamesâ Park, a 2â0 aggregate lead in his back pocket and some frustrations off his chest. âItâs part of the game, we have to do it better. We know it is going to happen so we have to do it better.â