Should Gomez have been sent off for tackle on Wirtz?published at 18:55 GMT 15 December
Dale Johnson
Football issues correspondent
Image source, Getty ImagesPremier League video assistant referees continue to have a problem with red cards.
In the past two seasons 15 of the 49 VAR errors (30.6%) have related to missed or wrongly given red cards for serious foul play or violent conduct.
Brighton forward Diego Gomez may well be the 16th mistake after a chest-high challenge on Liverpool's Florian Wirtz only resulted in a caution.
It came in first-half injury time of Liverpool's 2-0 victory on Saturday.
After referee Craig Pawson only showed Gomez a yellow card, VAR Darren England reviewed the challenge but ruled that it was not made with excessive force and was not serious foul play so did not upgrade it to a red card.
According to the International Football Association Board (Ifab) - football's lawmakers - 'serious foul play' is a tackle or challenge that endangers the safety of an opponent or uses excessive force or brutality.
Gomez made the challenge from a standing position and there did not appear to be full contact on the opponent's chest - but it is hard to see how it did not endanger the safety of an opponent.
Let's look at what happened.
Wirtz got to the ball first and it had gone before Gomez even began to make his challenge. He then raised his foot high into the chest of Wirtz.
There was no obvious reason why Gomez needed to make the tackle in this fashion, with studs leading and a straight leg.
If both players had challenged in a similar way, both with high feet, then a yellow could have been more understandable.
If the Premier League's key match incidents panel do rule this is an error it will be the second time this season Liverpool's opponents should have been reduced to 10 men on a VAR review.
In August, Bournemouth's Marcos Senesi should have been sent off when handling the ball as Hugo Ekitike was about to run through on goal.
England was also the VAR for the hugely controversial red card shown to Arsenal's Myles Lewis-Skelly at Wolves last season.
Referee Michael Oliver had sent off Lewis-Skelly for serious foul play but he had misread the nature of the tackle. England did not intervene to downgrade it to a yellow card.
Coincidentally, Arsenal and Wolves met again this weekend at Emirates Stadium, and there was a check for a red card for a challenge by Hwang Hee-Chan on Lewis-Skelly.
Crucially, although Hwang was sliding into the challenge he was pulling out of it when he crashed into the opponent. Hwang did not lead in with studs or a straight leg, which indicate increased force.
A yellow card was a fair outcome in this incident.













































