The VAR Review: Estupiñán missed red card, Pickford penalty

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

After each weekend 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: Why Brighton & Hove Albion defender Pervis Estupiñán should have been sent off at West Ham, and how Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford got very lucky against Chelsea.


Possible red card: Estupiñán foul on Kilman

What happened: Max Kilman brought the ball forward in the middle of the pitch in the 84th minute when Pervis Estupiñán attempted to make a challenge. The Brighton & Hove Albion defender fouled Kilman and referee Rob Jones immediately produced a yellow card. It was checked by the VAR, Paul Tierney.

VAR decision: No red card.

VAR review: Kobbie Mainoo played the ball against Semenyo from close range, enabling the Bournemouth player to take possession.

As this wasn’t immediately before the goal — there were a few passes before the ball came back to Semenyo — it would have to be a deliberate handball, or the arm extended away from the body.

Semenyo had his arm close to his side, so it was just a question of whether he leaned into the ball as a deliberate movement.

Verdict: The ball probably did hit Semenyo’s arm, but any movement seemed to be natural rather than an attempt to take control and it wasn’t clear and obvious enough for a VAR intervention.

Some factual parts of this article include information provided by the Premier League and PGMOL.