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A new response has been given following the decision to disallow Virgil van Dijk's first-half goal during Liverpool's defeat against Manchester City on Sunday.Former Premier League referee Chris Foy has claimed that there was "not a clear and obvious error" leading up to Virgil van Dijk's disallowed goal during Liverpool's 3-0 defeat at Manchester City.After Erling Haaland put City in front just before the half hour mark, the Reds thought they had equalised moments later when Van Dijk headed home Mohamed Salah's corner. However, as Van Dijk reeled off to celebrate with his team-mates, assistant referee Stuart Burt lifted up his flag and ruled that Andy Robertson was impacting Gianluigi Donnarumma's view while in an offside position.VAR took a closer look at the incident, but decided that Burt made the correct call and the goal was disallowed - much to the frustration of the Liverpool players and their manager Arne Slot.
Indeed, the Reds head coach fumed in his post-match press conference and claimed that it was "obvious" the "wrong decision" was made.READ MORE: Premier League releases full VAR audio of Virgil van Dijk incident after Liverpool complaintREAD MORE: Liverpool icon delivers brutal reality check over title hopes - 'Don't get carried away'On Monday, Liverpool contacted Professional Game Match Officials Ltd (PGMOL) chief Howard Webb to raise "concerns" about Van Dijk's disallowed goal. While he said he would have preferred if Van Dijk's goal stood, he didn't think there was a clear and obvious mistake.Foy told The Guardian: "There was one big incident that grabbed all the headlines and prompted conversation this weekend in the Premier League; the decision by the referee Chris Kavanagh to deny Liverpool an equalising goal in their high-stakes match against Manchester City.
The decision is massively subjective, in my opinion, but not a clear and obvious error."Starting from the top; the ball is in the back of the net after Virgil van Dijk's header from a corner, and the assistant referee, Stuart Burt, flags for offside. For a VAR intervention you need clear evidence to overturn a decision and there wasn't any."Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content.
