Nottingham Forest manager Sean Dyche has expressed his outrage at the referee's decision to award Manchester United a corner kick in the build-up to the visitors' opener, describing it as "farcical". The incident occurred on Saturday when Nicolo Savona's clearance from Bryan Mbeumo's delivery was heading out of play, but the Italian full-back chased after his own header and appeared to stop the whole ball from crossing the byeline.
However, linesman Akil Howson signalled that the ball had gone out of play, prompting referee Darren England to award the corner - from which Casemiro put Ruben Amorim's side in front in a game which ended 2-2.
Dyche believes there should have been an override on this decision as the corner kick led to a goal. "There has to be someone who overrides this decision, because it's gone and they've put it straight in the goal," he said.
The incident has raised questions about VAR (Video Assistant Referee) decisions, particularly those that result in awarding corners instead of goal kicks. Under current laws, the VAR cannot review such decisions, even if they lead to a goal.
Dyche's frustration was compounded by the fact that assistant referee Howson had signaled for a goal kick from 75 yards away behind the goal, which seemed an implausible distance to see the ball clearly crossing the line. The Forest manager argued that it is "really disappointing" and questioned how Howson could have seen the ball hanging over the line so clearly.
Match of the Day pundit Alan Shearer sympathised with Dyche and agreed that the officials got it wrong, stating "Sean Dyche has got a point... I wouldn't like to get VAR involved as it is stopping and starting as it is. I wouldn't encourage that, but I would encourage the officials to do their job properly and get it right, not guess."
However, linesman Akil Howson signalled that the ball had gone out of play, prompting referee Darren England to award the corner - from which Casemiro put Ruben Amorim's side in front in a game which ended 2-2.
Dyche believes there should have been an override on this decision as the corner kick led to a goal. "There has to be someone who overrides this decision, because it's gone and they've put it straight in the goal," he said.
The incident has raised questions about VAR (Video Assistant Referee) decisions, particularly those that result in awarding corners instead of goal kicks. Under current laws, the VAR cannot review such decisions, even if they lead to a goal.
Dyche's frustration was compounded by the fact that assistant referee Howson had signaled for a goal kick from 75 yards away behind the goal, which seemed an implausible distance to see the ball clearly crossing the line. The Forest manager argued that it is "really disappointing" and questioned how Howson could have seen the ball hanging over the line so clearly.
Match of the Day pundit Alan Shearer sympathised with Dyche and agreed that the officials got it wrong, stating "Sean Dyche has got a point... I wouldn't like to get VAR involved as it is stopping and starting as it is. I wouldn't encourage that, but I would encourage the officials to do their job properly and get it right, not guess."