Vieira critical of the decision to award Liverpool penalty

Jan 24, 2022 3 min read
Liverpool striker Diogo Jota is brought down by Crystal Palace goalkeeper Vicente Guaita

The Eagles pushed for a late equaliser before Liverpool won a late spot-kick.

Crystal Palace manager Patrick Vieira was critical of the “naive” decision to award Liverpool a late penalty in their 3-1 home defeat.

Odsonne Edouard’s 55th-minute tap-in had given the Eagles hope of taking points off Jurgen Klopp’s side, who started brilliantly in south London and scored twice in the first half through Virgil Van Dijk and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.

Palace had pulled a goal back which set up a grandstand finish. Still, an innocuous coming together between Diogo Jota and Palace goalkeeper Vicente Guaita saw the Reds awarded a spot-kick. Fabinho dispatched the game to bed a minute from time.

Liverpool's Fabinho slots home the penalty kick against Crystal Palace

“I think we give ourselves the best chance to get something from the game, but that decision by the referee took our hope away. That poor decision from the referee took our hope away,” Vieira said.

“The reason to have those meetings with the referee is to explain to coaches that contact is part of the game, so in that situation, there is not an apparent contact; there will not be a penalty.

“This one here and when you look at the situation with Jota, who I believe was quite clever, but at the same, the referee was naive or the VAR, I should say was naive.

“There is no way that Jota could get the ball back and score or that Vince tried to stop. There is no way Vince and Jota cannot have contact because of the situation they were in.”

Opposition number Klopp was less forthcoming about the incident in the 85th minute, with Jota playing through on goal only to miss his kick and collide with Guaita in the aftermath of his failed attempt.

The Liverpool boss said: “I didn’t see it, but Jota thought it was a penalty. I could see that on the pitch.

“VAR thought it was a penalty, and that is why the referee went to the screen, so I am not sure what we are talking about now? Four eyes watched it.”

Klopp was at a loss to explain why Liverpool lost their rhythm after dominating the opening 35 minutes.

It had been a taxing week for the Carabao Cup finalists, who booked their place at Wembley with a 2-0 win over Arsenal on Thursday and had seen off Brentford by a 3-0 score last weekend.

This month, the fourth win without Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane helped the Anfield club close the gap at the top of the Premier League to nine points after Manchester City, who have played a game more, were held to a 1-1 draw by Southampton on Saturday.

“The first 35 minutes was brilliant and some of the best stuff we have played all season. Exactly the way we want to play, and if somebody had an explanation for what happened after 35 minutes, I would like it,” Klopp added.

“I don’t understand but 100 per cent a bit of a fatigue problem, but we are not the first team to have that. Obviously, after being 2-0 up and after a super intense week, we just decided to have a little break on the pitch, but that is not possible.

“In these moments, the chances Palace created had been all set up by us. We gave the ball away at the wrong moment and these sorts of things. So that is what happened, but why?

“If we had played the 90 minutes how we started, it would have been a tough afternoon for Crystal Palace, and it could have been a draw or whatever, so I am over the moon with this result. It was so important for us.”

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