Why Ipswich’s penalty vs. Chelsea stood; how Pedro escaped a red card

Video Assistant Referee causes controversy every week in the Premier League, but how are decisions made, and are they correct?

We take a look at the major incidents, to examine and explain the process both in terms of VAR protocol and the Laws of the Game.

In this week’s VAR Review: Were Ipswich Town fortunate to get a penalty against Chelsea? Should João Pedro have been sent off against Brentford? Was the VAR right to give Aston Villa a spot kick against Brighton? Plus, all the other high-profile incident from across the festive programme of fixtures.


Possible penalty overturn: Jørgensen foul on Delap

What happened: Ipswich Town were awarded a penalty in the 10th minute when Liam Delap went to ground under a challenge from Chelsea goalkeeper Filip Jørgensen. Did the striker dive? It was looked at by the VAR, Michael Oliver.

VAR decision: Penalty stands, scored by Delap.

VAR review: Delap got to the ball first, and as he stood up to continue went down for the spot kick. The Ipswich striker went down very easily, and Jørgensen gave the referee a decision to make by rushing out and not getting to the ball.

We’ve seen this kind of penalty decision pretty regularly across the season. And protocol says that if lower-body contact can be confirmed, then the decision should stand unless it has been initiated by the attacker. See Newcastle United‘s Anthony Gordon being brought down by minimal contact from Manchester City goalkeeper Ederson, or Liverpool‘s Diogo Jota winning a spot kick off Newcastle’s Martin Dúbravka.