News24
15 Feb 2020, 11:43 GMT+10
Wolverhampton - Nuno Espirito Santo claimed football is in danger of becoming robotic after Wolves were controversially denied by VAR and Leicester's Hamza Choudhury was sent off in a stormy 0-0 draw at Molineux on Friday.
Santo's side thought they had taken the lead when Willy Boly headed home in the first half, but VAR stepped in to chalk off the goal for the tightest of offside calls against Diogo Jota.
Wolves were furious, but the officiating turned in their favour after half-time as Leicester had a penalty appeal turned down before midfielder Choudhury was sent off for a second booking.
Still unhappy at full-time, Santo bemoaned the way VAR decisions and long delays are sucking the emotional out of the sport.
"It is reality now but each time it happens it upsets you. When you see the images, there is not a clear advantage but the law is the law," he said.
"The ref said it was offside. We have to get used to it and hope it improves. They have to improve, it's obvious.
"Something has to be done. Let those who understand do something to have the joy of celebrating. We are in danger of becoming robots."
Leicester remain third in the Premier League, one point behind second placed Manchester City as they bid to qualify for the Champions League.
Leicester boss Brendan Rodgers was encouraged by his team's second clean-sheet in their last 11 league games, especially as they had to withstand a late Wolves barrage.
"To keep a clean-sheet is very pleasing. I didn't think the first one was a yellow. I felt Hamza was unfortunate," Rodgers said.
"It is the game now, his little toe was offside. They will feel it was harsh," he added of the VAR decision.
Wolves had returned from a winter break in Spain for the 42nd game of a gruelling season that started with Europa League action back in July.
But they never looked fatigued in a bruising encounter and climb to seventh in the table.
Pedro Neto cut into the Leicester penalty area and found Jota early on, but Wolves winger's low shot was blocked by the outstretched leg of Leicester keeper Kasper Schmeichel.
Neto was the provider again when Leander Dendoncker glanced just wide from his corner.
Caglar Soyuncu should have put Leicester ahead but he nodded straight at Rui Patricio from James Maddison's free-kick.
Wolves defender Matt Doherty needed lengthy treatment to close a gaping wound that left blood pouring from his head after a clash with Maddison.
Doherty was eventually able to continue and played a role in the move that nearly brought Wolves the opening goal in the 44th minute.
Neto's cross was flicked on by Doherty to Boly and he headed home, only for VAR to disallow the goal for an extremely tight offside against Jota, who had passed to Neto in the build-up.
Wolves captain Conor Coady was furious with referee Mike Dean as the players walked off at half-time, reportedly shouting "You're the referee and even you don't know" at the official.
VAR went in Wolves' favour after the break when Maddison appeared to be shoved over by Romain Saiss in the penalty area, with Dean giving a goal-kick and the review system backing his assessment.
And it was Leicester's turn to suffer at the hands of Dean again in the 76th minute.
Already on a booking, Choudhury slipped over and lost control of the ball, reacting with a lunging tackle that sent Dendoncker sprawling.
Wolves nearly took advantage of their numerical superiority when substitute Adama Traore picked out Raul Jimenez for a header that flashed over.
Jimenez was guilty of a worse miss in the closing moments when he again failed to hit the target with a header from Joao Moutinho's delivery.
Get a daily dose of Bristol Star news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Bristol Star.
More InformationWASHINGTON, D.C.: The Trump administration has made public a visa decision that would usually be kept private. It did this to send...
LONDON, U.K.: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer won a vote in Parliament this week to move ahead with changes to the country's welfare...
PARIS, France: L'Oréal is making a fresh play in the booming premium haircare segment with a new acquisition. The French beauty conglomerate...
LONDON, UK - Lawmakers in the United Kingdom have voted overwhelmingly to proscribe the direct-action group Palestine Action as a terrorist...
Washington [US], July 6 (ANI): British singer Zayn Malik appears to have addressed the racism he faced during his 'One Direction' days...
(Photo credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images) McLaren's Lando Norris won his first British Grand Prix -- his home-country event -- in a...
MOSCOW, Russia: This week, Russia became the first country to officially recognize the Taliban as the government of Afghanistan since...
CAIRO, Egypt: This week, both Hamas and Israel shared their views ahead of expected peace talks about a new U.S.-backed ceasefire plan....
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Trump administration has made public a visa decision that would usually be kept private. It did this to send...
MADRID, Spain: Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota and his younger brother, André Silva, have died in a car accident in Spain. Spanish...
LONDON, U.K.: An unrelenting heatwave sweeping across Europe has pushed early summer temperatures to historic highs, triggering deadly...
President Donald Trump's plans to build a space-based Golden Dome missile defense shield have drawn immediate criticism from China,...