
Biggest VAR call ever? Four chaotic minutes that may define the season
The most consequential decision in the history of VAR in the Premier League is played out over four minutes 11 seconds of drama at London Stadium.
West Ham have injury-time goal disallowed as Arsenal go five clear
The most consequential decision in the history of the video assistant referee in the Premier League was played out over four minutes 11 seconds of nerve-shredding drama inside London Stadium.
That time span, which felt like an age, became the moment that has the capacity to alter the immediate course of history for Arsenal and West Ham United.
In the wider context, it is the incident and VAR decision that might be seen as the season-defining moment at both ends of the table.
Arsenal were leading 1-0 deep into stoppage time through Leandro Trossard's 83rd-minute goal when West Ham substitute Callum Wilson hammered home a finish in a packed penalty box following a corner.
West Ham celebrated, Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta turned away with his head in his hands fearing a vital win had slipped through their fingers with only seconds left - then the protests began.
Has there ever been such drama involving VAR? Have there ever been such consequences riding on a decision in the Premier League?
And the fact it came so late in a tense, high-stakes game made the wait near unbearable for those with a vested interest.
Arsenal insisted goalkeeper David Raya had been fouled by Pablo, with his West Ham opposite number Mads Hermansen flying across in front of him in a blur as a sign of the home side's desperate plight.
Darren England then had to pore over the most significant domestic VAR decision since its inception in 2019 before sending referee Chris Kavanagh to the screen.
VAR decisions have been important before - but none have been quite so heavy, with the consequences potentially giving Arsenal a decisive push towards their first Premier League title in 22 years, while at the same time sending West Ham towards the Championship.
When Wilson's shot crossed the line, West Ham fans exploded in delirium and then everyone held their breath before Arsenal's followers, packed into a corner of the stadium, reacted in similar fashion when the referee announced: "After review, West Ham number 19 committed a foul on the goalkeeper."
And with those few fateful words, Arsenal now hold a position of huge strength five points ahead of Manchester City - having played a game more - while West Ham look increasingly doomed, sitting a point behind Tottenham Hotspur, who play their game in hand at home to Leeds United on Monday.
West Ham and their fans melted into a mutinous fury that continued long after the final whistle, feeling they had been robbed of a vital point in their fight for survival, as Arsenal celebrated a victory of huge importance.
The pushing and pulling in the box leading to West Ham's disallowed goal
While weighing up whether to instruct Kavanagh to take a trip to the sidelines, England also looked at potential fouls by Trossard on Pablo and Declan Rice on Crysencio Summerville.
He decided the first foul was Pablo's on Raya.
This seemed like an incident that has been a long time coming given the regular push-and-pull that now takes place involving so many players inside the penalty box.
How this can be eradicated is almost impossible to work out as it is a situation that is now close to being beyond the control of officials.
Reactions were contrasting everywhere you looked. On the pitch. On the sidelines. In the stands. And then in the aftermath.
Where's the consistency? - Bowen frustrated by VAR
Arsenal manager Arteta praised how "brave" the officials had been to make the decision - and yes, those of a West Ham persuasion said: "Well he would say that wouldn't he?"
Arteta added: "Probably today I have realised how difficult and how big a referee's job is. I realised for the referees to be in that position, to make that call and change the course of one of the two teams... What a responsibility. What a big call."
He told BBC Radio 5 Live: "It was a massive call but it was clearly the right call. My first instinct was foul but then the time goes by, the referee is waiting for the VAR decision - but when you look at it, the contact affects the way David Raya lifts his hands, the way he catches the ball. It is almost on his throat.
"Massive decision, especially when the two teams are fighting for such big things."
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Source: BBC Sport Football
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