Dean Henderson starred for Crystal Palace in their FA Cup final victory over Manchester City â but should the goalkeeper have been sent off?
On 24 minutes, Henderson handled the ball outside his box, palming it away from Erling Haaland as the Man City forward tried to race onto a pass.
Referee Stuart Attwell and his assistant referees appeared to think the incident occurred inside the penalty area as they allowed play to continue.
When the ball later went out of play, the game was paused for a VAR check for a possible red card for Henderson for denying a clear goalscoring opportunity.
This indicated the VAR officials believed Henderson had committed a handball offence. However, they judged that, as the ball was going away from goal, Haaland did not have a clear goalscoring chance.
Play continued, with Henderson not punished for the incident, and the goalkeeper went on to make a string of saves, including one to keep out Omar Marmoushâs penalty in the first half.
City boss Pep Guardiola did not want to discuss the incident afterwards, saying only: âIâm not the referee.â
Glasner admitted he was concerned about what the VAR would decide. âI thought, âWhy donât you kick the ball?â he said. âAnd then I had my fingers crossed that the VAR didnât even intervene.â
Asked if it was a good decision, Glasner said: âFor us, yes.â
Henderson wasnât aware the VAR check involved him. He said: âI didnât know [the VAR check] was for me in all honesty. The ball had come into the box so I wasnât sure what they were doing it for. Who cares, it doesnât matter.â
Sky Sportsâ Roy Keane added: âWhat you need to win a cup is a bit of luck and that was a huge one.â
Speaking on ITV, former Palace striker Ian Wright said: âHow this is not denying a goalscoring opportunity, itâs absolutely pathetic. Itâs crazy, heâs going to tap that past him and then heâs just going to tap that into the goal.
âWhy are they making up these rules and saying it so eloquently? To confuse us? Thatâs supposed to be a sending-off.â
Former City defender Joleon Lescott went even further in his assessment, adding: âThatâs one of the worst decisions Iâve seen in football. Because of the explanation, not because of the decision.
âTo deem that is not a goalscoring opportunity, one of the most prolific goalscorers weâve seen.â
Similar views were expressed by former England captain Wayne Rooney on BBC, who said: âIt is a red card â how can they get this wrong? Just get rid of VAR.
âThey have made a mistake and now they are trying to cover up. It is a red card and everyone can see itâs a red card.â
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