Webb confirms VAR decision in West Ham v Arsenal was correct, warns of new foul guidelines
Howard Webb, chief refereeing officer, has defended the disallowed goal in West Ham’s stoppage-time bid to equalise against Arsenal, affirming the VAR’s call was justified. Ahead of next season, the PGMOL will introduce stricter guidelines targeting interference with goalkeepers’ ability to play the ball.
Premier League referees will clamp down harder on contact that prevents goalkeepers catching or punching the ball next season, the game’s top official confirmed on Tuesday, following a late goal disallowed in West Ham’s 1-0 defeat to Arsenal.
📋 Key Decision
- Callum Wilson’s goal — Scored in 90+5 but ruled out for foul on goalkeeper David Raya
- VAR involved — Darren England consulted replays before disallowing
- Refereeing directive — Howard Webb says new guidance targets goalkeeper interference explicitly
The controversy erupted at the London Stadium on Sunday when Wilson’s header in fifth added minute appeared to level the match, only for the video assistant referee to intervene moments later. Webb, speaking on the PGMOL’s Match Officials Mic’d Up podcast, said the call was “categorically correct” and based on long-standing instructions to protect goalkeepers.
“We’ve said all season, including in pre-season briefings with the players, that if a goalkeeper is impeded by an opponent grabbing or holding their arms and therefore they can’t do their job, they’ll be penalised,” Webb said. He stressed that the focus is not on routine contact but on deliberate interference that stops the ‘keeper from acting.
| Contact Type | Previous Ruling | New Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Brushing arm | Often ignored | Penalised if it prevents action |
| Full-body block | Penalised | Still penalised, but reviewed for intent |
| Wrist or hand grab | Rarely penalised | Now automatic free-kick |
Arteta praised referee Darren England for having “a lot of courage” to disallow the goal, but West Ham manager Nuno Espírito Santo argued the decision showed “a lack of consistency.” Webb dismissed concerns about inconsistency, insisting the rule has been clearly communicated and consistently applied in training and matchday scenarios.
Key Points
- ✅ VAR’s call was correct under existing rules
- ⚡ New season will see stricter enforcement on goalkeeper interference
- 💡 Clubs have received updated guidance in pre-season briefings
The moment has intensified scrutiny over refereeing standards, coming just days after another chaotic VAR review at a top-flight match. Webb acknowledged the fallout but said the priority is protecting the integrity of goalkeeper actions, a core principle the Premier League has defended since the VAR system’s introduction.
💡 Pro Tip
Goalkeepers can now expect referees to penalise even brief holds on their arms or wrists during set pieces and open play, so defenders should adjust positioning to avoid accidental infringements.
With Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur nervously watching the title race, every point matters. The disallowed goal swung the result and reshaped the top-four battle, but Webb’s confirmation of the ruling has shifted focus to what referees will watch next season. A league-wide briefing on the new approach is scheduled for June, with clubs told to prepare for tighter interpretation of contact in and around the penalty area.
The change reflects growing concerns that some players are exploiting loopholes to nullify goalkeepers’ effectiveness. Webb said the league’s referees have been instructed to intervene early, even in marginal situations, to prevent last-minute controversies from defining matches.