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Was it correct to disallow Liverpool equaliser at Man City?

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Liverpool may have been on the end of a 3-0 defeat at Manchester City, but did a pivotal moment dramatically alter the course of the game?The Premier League champions were 1-0 down at the time following Erling Haaland's opener just before the half-hour mark.However, the Reds thought they had equalised in the 38th minute when captain Virgil van Dijk headed home.The Netherlands centre-back escaped the attentions of Matheus Nunes and met Mohamed Salah's inswinging corner just outside the six-yard box.Van Dijk planted a powerful header beyond the dive of City goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma and ran off celebration.However, the assistant referee then decided to raise his flag and a check by the video assistant referee (VAR) determined that Liverpool defender Andy Robertson interfered with play from an offside position and it was disallowed.Robertson had his back to goal on the line, behind Jeremy Doku, and ducked out of the way of Van Dijk's header.But was it the correct call?Offside is covered by law 11 of the IFAB Laws of the Game 2025-26., externalThe graphic below by the clarifies the law and the Premier League's match centre on X made specific reference to the incident."The referee's call of offside and no goal to Liverpool was checked and confirmed by VAR - with Robertson in an offside position and deemed to be making an obvious action directly in front of the goalkeeper," it said.The decision to disallow Van Dijk's goal provoked debate among pundits.Former Liverpool midfielder Danny Murphy said the goal "should stand" because Robertson was "not in Donnarumma's line of vision".Ex-Manchester United defender Gary Neville said during Sky Sports' commentary he was "not sure" if it should have been chalked off because Robertson was "to the left of Donnarumma" and he was "not convinced" the City goalkeeper "is ever getting near that".Former Aston Villa forward Dion Dublin said "Robertson is in an offside position" but crucially was "not in his [Donnarumma's] eyeline"."I have seen it two or three times and if anyone could be in his eyeline it would be Jeremy Doku," Dublin added.Ex-Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney agreed that it should have stood and said: "I don't think Andy Robertson delayed Donnarumma diving. The Scotland international was stood offside, and the assistant raised his flag for offside.This decision was not about line of vision, but "an obvious action which clearly impacts on the ability of an opponent to play the ball".



The offside law does not require a referee to think Manchester City goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma would definitely save it, only that his ability to do so has been affected. It is the ducking motion which is absolutely crucial.If Donnarumma had not been stood close to Robertson, or if the Scotland international was not in the six-yard area, the case for offside would have been weak.

Dominic Calvert-Lewin's shot was deflected towards goal, and an offside Gylfi Sigurdsson, who was sat inside the six-yard box, withdrew his legs to allow the ball through. Chris Kavanagh.We have seen a couple of similar situations this season - a Manchester United goal at Nottingham Forest, and one for Leeds against Bournemouth - where an offside player has made a small movement away from the ball.