A drone hovering above the Community Stadium forced the players off the pitch for 20 minutes.
Brentford striker Ivan Toney refused to drone on about excuses after their stop-start defeat by Wolves.
There were bizarre scenes at Brentford’s Community Stadium as both sets of players were forced off the pitch for almost 20 minutes while a drone hovered above.
The flying nuisance eventually buzzed off to allow play to get back underway, and Joao Moutinho put Wolves ahead before Toney equalised.
But Ruben Neves brought the Bees crashing back to earth as his late strike condemned them to a 2-1 loss, their sixth defeat in seven matches.
“It was a tough one to take,” said Toney. “I felt that when we got the equaliser, it was only going to go one way, which was our way.
“But the quality they showed from the edge of the box, they’ve got the quality to do that.
“It was tough, but we can’t use it as an excuse. Both teams had the stoppage. You’ve got to stay focused and keep on the move.
“I felt that when we came back out from the pause for the drone, we started poorly. But it’s stops and starts, and we can’t do anything about that.
“You’ve got to go out and continue with the game, and they coped with it well and got the three points.”
Toney’s goal, a fine volley from Bryan Mbeumo’s free-kick, took his tally for the season to seven.
The 25-year-old feels Brentford need to use the international break to “reset” and get back to winning ways before they get sucked into trouble.
“I feel there’s something we can take out of the game. We have to look forward now and try to change it in the next game,” Toney added.
“On a personal note, it was another one for the tally, but it’s much sweeter when there are three points behind it.
“It’s time to reset. We’re on a bad run. We know that. But it’s not like we’ve been playing poorly. We’re just conceding silly goals.
“If we cut that out, we’ve got a great chance. It’s time to restart and go again.”
Wolves winger Adama Traore came on as a substitute amid reports linking him with Tottenham and had a late goal ruled out for a tight offside.
“The most important thing is the way he plays for us,” said boss Bruno Lage.
“He played again with energy and scored the third ‘goal’ again. He scored last week, and the way he celebrated with his teammates and also with me.
“He’s a team player, a big professional and a lovely guy. I’m pleased with him.”