Saturday, 13 December 2025

VAR Controversy - To See Red Or Not - That Is The Question

The short answer as to whether or not Wolves' Hee-Chan should have seen red against Arsenal is: a studs-up challenge can be a red-card offence, but it depends on the level of danger and intent.





What the Laws of the Game say (IFAB)



Under Law 12 – Fouls and Misconduct, a tackle is a sending-off offence (red card) if it is judged to be serious foul play.


A challenge is considered serious foul play if it:


  • Endangers the safety of an opponent, or
  • Uses excessive force or brutality

Although a studs-up challenge is not automatically a red card, it is one of the clearest indicators referees use when deciding that a challenge endangers safety and when the studs connect, especially in a sliding tackle I'm not sure how anyone can say it does not endanger the safety of the opponent, in this case, Jurien Timber. 





When studs-up = RED card 🔴



Referees are very likely to show red if:


  • Studs are exposed and make contact with:
    • the shin
    • the knee
    • the ankle
  • The tackle is:
    • high
    • forceful
    • late
    • made with a straight leg
  • The opponent is unable to protect themselves



This is often described in referee guidance as "studs exposed with excessive force".





When it might be YELLOW 🟨



A studs-up action may be downgraded to yellow if:


  • Contact is low (foot or lower ankle)
  • Force is limited
  • The tackler pulls out or makes minimal contact
  • The opponent is not endangered



This is usually classed as reckless rather than dangerous. 

Let's look at those four categories: 1) contact was low. I make no broken bones about that, but the force was not exactly limited, the contact was not minimal and the opponent was endangered. Overall, it has to be red! When are VAR going to get these decisions right? It's got to the point where I don't always celebrate goals for fear that VAR will chalk them off! 





Key phrase referees use



"Endangering the safety of an opponent"


If a studs-up challenge meets that threshold, it is a mandatory red card, regardless of intent.





VAR context (important)



VAR reviews often upgrade yellows to reds when slow-motion shows:


  • Studs making clear, forceful contact
  • A locked or straight leg
  • Point of contact above the ankle



This is why decisions sometimes change after review. So will this decision change? Probably not, based on the above. The studs made clear, forceful contact so it was only an ankle breaker rather than a leg breaker, as Timber's leg may or may not have been locked or totally straight. However, it was pretty close. The point of contact was below the ankle, not above, so on two or one and a half counts out of three, it's not red.


Let's make no broken bones about it, Wolves are a good team and don't deserve to go down based on that performance. However, all players need protection. Arsenal have a lot of injuries right now and part of that is down to poor officiating. VAR hasn't improved that. In fact, it's been worse since VAR got involved. 





Bottom line



  • ❌ Studs-up ≠ automatic red
  • ✅ Studs-up + danger/excessive force = red card
  • ⚠️ Studs-up with limited force = possible yellow
  • The real bottom line is are match officials doing a good job? I'll let you decide.


VAR + Wolves Not Toothless But Gunners Triumph

You can call it all of the following: 'Own-Goal Opera, Saka the Sorcerer, and Finally – Luck Wears Red', but in the end hard work won the day over dodgy officiating and dogged defending.


There are wins that feel routine, wins that feel deserved, and wins that feel like you've nicked them while the football gods were briefly looking the other way. This was very much the third.


An own goal deep into stoppage time sealed a breathless, borderline farcical victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers, as we somehow emerged from a late-night Emirates rollercoaster with three points that keep us perched on top of the Premier League. Five points clear. Still standing. Still breathing.


It should never have been this hard. Of course, that's exactly why it was.





FIRST-HALF FRUSTRATION



Anyone expecting a procession between the league leaders and a side marooned at the bottom was quickly reminded that football has a wicked sense of humour. The first half was flat, tense, and oddly anxious – the kind of half where the crowd starts checking phones and muttering about banana skins.


Our opening effort summed it up: Jurrien Timber nodding over from a central position while Viktor Gyökeres stood nearby wondering why the ball hadn't come his way. Wolves, to their credit, weren't interested in lying down. When Hwang Hee-Chan burst 50 yards through the middle on the counter, it took a solid stop from David Raya to prevent early embarrassment.


That moment carried a cost. Ben White, in hot pursuit, pulled up with a muscle injury, and Myles Lewis-Skelly was thrown into the action on the half-hour.


We probed. We huffed. We puffed. And Gabriel Martinelli somehow missed three times in ways that defied geometry: a free header wide, a shot blocked after a vicious Saka cross, and then a loose poke after Sam Johnstone spilled a corner. Still, somehow, no shots on target by half-time.


Wolves even had the best late chance of the half, only for Piero Hincapié to slide in heroically and deny Strand Larsen. It felt ominous. The sort of half that has "punished later" written all over it.





STROKE OF FORTUNE



The second half crawled into life before Arteta reached for the cavalry. On came Ødegaard, Trossard and Merino, and suddenly the tempo lifted. Declan Rice twice went close – first with a free-kick tipped over, then with a fierce effort from the edge of the box that Johnstone somehow clawed away.


It had been 46 years since we last failed to score against Wolves. Mercifully, we didn't make history.


On 70 minutes, Bukayo Saka did Bukayo Saka things. His corner curled wickedly, kissed the inside of the post, smacked Johnstone on the head and bounced in. A goal that belonged half to physics, half to mischief, and entirely to momentum.


The place exhaled. Surely now, we'd finish them off.


Ødegaard hit the side-netting. Gyökeres flashed one wide. Trossard rolled a clever effort inches past the post. Chances came and went, and with every miss, the nerves crept back in.





DOUBLE LATE DRAMA



And then came the nightmare we know too well.


As the clock ticked into the 90th minute, Wolves suddenly found belief. Matheus Mané crossed, Tolu Arokodare flicked, and the ball deceived Raya before nestling in the net. The Emirates groaned in unison. Sunderland. Aston Villa. Here we go again.


Except this time… no.


In the fourth minute of added time, Saka swung in yet another delivery – a corner with menace, intent, and destiny attached. Gabriel Jesus attacked it, Mosquera panicked, and the ball deflected past his own goalkeeper. Chaos. Limbs. Absolute bedlam.


For once, the late drama went our way.





LOOSE CANNON VERDICT



Was it pretty? Not really.

Was it controlled? Absolutely not.

Was it massive? Without question.

Was Hee-Chan's challenge on Timber a red card offence? Absolutely! Studs up and planted low down on Timber's standing leg! How is that not red? It's reckless, dangerous and career-threatening. The goons rather than Gooners in their comfortable VAR nest decided it was above board! I still can't believe it, but it makes you realise why Arsenal have so many players in sick bay: no protection from match officials, who ignored every Wolves shove, tug and pull when it suited their them.


Ultimately, this was grit over gloss, fortune over fluency – and sometimes that's exactly what title contenders need. We didn't fold. We didn't sulk. We kept knocking until luck finally remembered who's been knocking all season.


Top of the league. Five points clear. And finally, finally, a late goal that wasn't inflicted on us.





WHAT'S NEXT



A week to recover frayed nerves before we head to the Hill Dickinson Stadium to face Everton on Saturday, December 20. Then it's Crystal Palace at home in the Carabao Cup quarter-final on December 23, before Brighton arrive in north London two days after Christmas.


If this season is going to be a marathon, nights like this are the blisters you learn to walk through.


On we go.