Arteta’s “embarrassing” outburst exposed him as the most recent VAR hypocrite.
Following Arsenal’s Saturday loss to Newcastle, Mikel Arteta has emerged as the most recent Premier League manager to exhibit duplicity in his opinions regarding video assistant refereeing.
The manager of the Gunners was furious that Anthony Gordon’s game-winning goal at St. James’ Park might stand after a four-minute review of three different offences during the build-up.
Calling the verdict a “disgrace,” Arteta stated that the goal should have been chalked off for a number of reasons, including the fact that the ball had rolled out of play before Joe Willock’s cross.
It’s humiliating. Everyone in that [dressing] room feels the same way that I do. After the match, the manager of Arsenal told Sky Sports, “You cannot imagine the amount of messages we’ve got saying this cannot continue.”
“I feel unwell. That’s my sentiment. To be a part of this makes me sick. We cannot accept that it is not good enough.
This is a quick shift in the Spaniard’s perspective; in September, following Liverpool’s contentious loss at Tottenham, he seemed lot more forgiving of the officiating errors.
Due to an unusual VAR communication glitch that led referee Simon Hooper to rule that the offside call made on the pitch was correct, Luis Diaz was denied a genuine score.
Arteta was significantly more at ease discussing the non-team scenario when he was questioned about his thoughts on the incident in the aftermath, responding, “[The officials] are trying to make the best decisions.” We must acknowledge that errors are inevitable.
Fans may be concerned to learn that Andy Madley, the VAR for Arsenal’s loss, will also be in charge of Liverpool’s trip to Luton!
It follows Vincent Kompany’s sharply disparaging remarks from last month, in which he compared making VAR judgements to going to a “casino.”
The Burnley manager was not thrilled when his team’s late equaliser was disregarded following a five-minute review, but when he was questioned about the Diaz error, the Belgian became even more contemptuous.
Instead of working with Liverpool to press for changes that would have benefited the entire league, Kompany only replied, “We all make mistakes,” characterising such faults as “human.”
Following the Diaz error, the Reds issued an official statement underlining the “undermining of sporting integrity.” As a result of this pressure, the VAR audio was eventually made public in an effort to increase transparency.
Unfortunately, rival Premier League managers weren’t as motivated to work towards constructive change due to football’s tribal ethos, and that has backfired on some of them sooner than they would have liked!